Hahn v. Southwestern Gas Co.

82 So. 199, 145 La. 212, 1919 La. LEXIS 1705
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 5, 1919
DocketNo. 23143
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 82 So. 199 (Hahn v. Southwestern Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hahn v. Southwestern Gas Co., 82 So. 199, 145 La. 212, 1919 La. LEXIS 1705 (La. 1919).

Opinion

MONROE, C. J.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries and loss of time and property sustained by plaintiff as the result of a gas explosion which he attributes to the negligence of the defendant. It appears that he was engaged in the fruit, produce, and chicken trade; that he lived at No. 718 Market street, Shreveport, in a house the rear portion of which, by reason of the falling away in that direction of the lot upon which it is built, is elevated some 8 or 10 feet above the surface; and that he kept his stock of chickens in the back yard, and in part under the house; that on the night of September S, 1917, at about half past 10, apprehending rain and fearing that some of the chickens might be drowned, he went out to see about them, and, going under the house, lighted a match, and then a second match, with the result that there was an explosion, followed by a mass of flame, which enveloped him and set fire to the house. He testifies that he heard a noise that sounded to him like that made by water issuing from a pipe, and that he lighted the match in order to enable him to find it. As a matter of fact there was under the house a service pipe with an open end from which gas was issuing, and hence" the explosion and the flame. Plaintiff was badly burned about the face, ears, neck, and arms, and particularly upon his back, no doubt, by reason of the ignition of his shirt and undershirt, and was at once carried to a sanitarium, where he remained under treatment. for 18 days during a great part of which period his suffering was intense, and during the whole of which his condition was, to say the least, miserable, since ,his sores exuded a sticky and malodorous matter, which adhered to the bandages and rendered the frequent dressings that were required excessively painful. The burns on his head, neck, arms, and hands (with the exception, perhaps, of a place on one finger which was deeper) were of the second degree, involving the destruction of the cuticle but not of the derma, but the burn on his back, covering a space somewhat larger, probably, than that which would be covered by three silver dollars, placed in a row, was of the third degree, and there was a smaller burn of that character under one of his arms. There were two trials in the district court, the first, in October following the accident, and the second, in February, 1918, and on both occasions plaintiff complained of loss of strength, insomnia, and nervous irritability, and particularly that the new skin which had replaced the old upon his hands was so tender that he was unable to use those members as he had formerly done. Our conclusion, however, is that if he had not entirely recovered at the [215]*215time of the last trial, he was in a fair way to do so, and that, as he was then only 29 years of age, he has by this time probably, nothing to remind him of his injuries save the scar on his back, which he can carry without any great inconvenience. For some weeks after his return from the sanitarium, he was unable to attend to his business, and was obliged to employ, feed, and lodge a clerk, and, in addition to the amount awarded on account of his personal injuries, he was allowed something on that account, and also in reimbursement of his .expenses at the sanitarium and of a loss by reason of damage to his household effects.

[1, 2] The negligence charged against defendant is that the service pipe, having been left with an open end under the house occupied by plaintiff and the other end connected with defendant’s main pipe, defendant (through its employes) negligently turned on the gas from the main into the service pipe. The facts in that connection, as we find them, are as follows: The houses Nos. 714, 716, 718 and 720, Market street (to which some witness has applied the term “shacks”) stand in a row, and are rather close together.

As arranged, up to the time of the accident here in question, while a service pipe ’was provided for each of the houses, they did not enter the respective lots directly from the street in front of each, but, indirectly, through lot 718; that is to say, immediately in front of that lot there were, near the curb, in a row, but a few inches apart and buried in upright positions in the ground, with caps flush with the sidewalk on their tops, four oblong cases, or boxes, which, with the cocks that were inclosed within them, served as tollgates between defendant as the manufacturer, and the occupants of the four lots as the consumers', -of gas, which gates were opened or closed and the gas thereby furnished or withheld as the consumers paid their bills or failed so to do.

Wliy the four boxes were all located in front of No. 718 is not explained, but, being so located, the service pipes leading therefrom were carried, first, into that lot, and thence, right and left, into the other lots, respectively, the pipe intended for the service of lot 714, on the one .end, leading from lap. box nearest to that end, and the pipe intended for the service of lot 720 leading from the box nearest to the other end. For some reason, also unexplained, the service pipe leading originally to lot 714'was cut off, under the house on lot 718, leaving an open end, and leaving intact, as we infer, those ends of the pipe, respectively, which were installed upon the premises No. 714, and which connected with the box, or tollgate. Wah Lung, according to his testimony, moved into 714 on the day that plaintiff was burned, and on that day he applied to defendant to bring gas into the house (and his name, in some vague way, suggests the idea that he may have needed it urgently in connection with flat irons, etc., which may account for the fact that defendant undertook, as we think, to install the gas on that day, Labor Day, though it was). He testifies as follows:

“Q. On that day, did you try to get gas- connected to your house, or your store? A. Tes, sir; connect the meter, put in the meter; then open box on the outside the street; then he had no gas — come and take the meter away. After he go away, he no turn back. Q. How many times did the man try to turn on that gas ? A. Two or three times; don’t know; sometime me no home; me go place buy some stuff.”

The learned counsel for defendant say in their brief:

“Mr. J. A. Northcott (who at that time was employed by defendant company in its meter department) admits that, in company with one Mr. Davis, on Saturday September 1, 1911, he went to install a meter for a Chinaman, but, on investigation, by examination of the curb cock, and not by turning in the gas, found that there was no service. His testimony on this point is as follows:
[217]*217“ ‘Q. Did you and Mr. Davis go to a place on Market street to set a meter for a Chinaman? A. No; I did not go there; he had been there and went to turn the gas on, and I went with him; we did not turn the gas on. Q. Why? A. He stopped the car in front of 716. I did not see the book or anything — in a hurry to get wound up, being Saturday afternoon. I got out of the car, went to 716, thought that is where the meter (was that) he had installed; took the cap off one of the boxes, and he says this gas is turned on; says, “Go to see about 714.” I went, and asked the Chinaman how far the plumber had gone. We looked around, and I then told Davis no use to fool there, no connection had been made. This was blowed up; no use fooling there. Then I remembered that 712, 714, got gas from some place else.

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Bluebook (online)
82 So. 199, 145 La. 212, 1919 La. LEXIS 1705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahn-v-southwestern-gas-co-la-1919.