Hamden Lodge No. 517 v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co.

189 N.E. 246, 127 Ohio St. 469, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 469, 1934 Ohio LEXIS 394
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1934
Docket24385
StatusPublished
Cited by196 cases

This text of 189 N.E. 246 (Hamden Lodge No. 517 v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamden Lodge No. 517 v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co., 189 N.E. 246, 127 Ohio St. 469, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 469, 1934 Ohio LEXIS 394 (Ohio 1934).

Opinion

Bevis, J.

Two of the judges of the Court of Appeals were of the opinion that there was sufficient evidence of the defendant’s ownership or control of the service pipe to carry the case to the. jury if “the so-called scintilla rule” still prevails in Ohio, but not sufficient to carry it to the jury if this rule does not prevail. The third member of the court held that there was more than a “mere scintilla” of evidence upon this point, and he dissented from the entering of final judgment for the defendant.

He stated that he based his dissent upon ‘ ‘ evidence that the gas company installed the service line, made extensions of the same and installed its meters for the purpose of delivering gas to its consumers for profits, that at least one of these extensions was made and a .meter installed for the use of a tenant of the plaintiff below without the consent of the plaintiff.”

- The record discloses that the service pipe in question came from the curb cock, through the front foundation wall of the building, and ran along under the floor, partly on the surface of the ground, and partly beneath the surface, to the rear wall, where risers went up to the meters. There was no cellar under the building, and access to the service pipe could be had only through a small trapdoor inside the store.

The record further shows that the lodge building was constructed in the year 1907. Gas had only shortly theretofore been introduced into the village of Ham-den, and to encourage and facilitate its installation and use the gas company had, in some cases, attended to putting in the service lines as well as the street mains. It was asserted by the plaintiff, and an attempt was made to prove at the trial, that the gas company, at its *473 own expense, installed the service pipe in the building. We can find no evidence in the record, however, to support this claim. On the contrary, there is positive testimony that the piping in the building was done by a plumbing company from Wellston, and the records of the lodge show a lump payment for the work. Nor can we find evidence in the record that the defendant made either extensions or repairs.

It did own and install the meters. For a time there were two meters attached to the service pipe; one for the lodges above and one for the tenants below; but, when the explosion, occurred, and for a considerable time previous thereto, only one meter was used, the lodges paying the gas bills for the tenants. There is no positive evidence that the meters were either installed or removed without the consent of the plaintiffs, and, in our opinion, the reasonable inference from all of the facts is to the contrary. Section 9329, General Code.

There was testimony, furthermore, that a few years before the explosion some part, or all, of the service pipe was renewed at the direction of a member of the Odd Fellows’ Lodge, who paid for the work with a check. Whether that person was still a member of the building committee, and whether the cheek was a “lodge” check, the evidence fails definitely to establish. In this state of the record, the individual view of the dissenting judge seems founded on misapprehension.

The record containing no evidence that the gas company installed, extended, or repaired the service line, there remain substantially only the facts that the line was used exclusively for the conveyance of gas from the defendant’s mains into the plaintiffs’ premises, and that the defendant owned, connected, and, at proper intervals, read the meters. Was this sufficient to carry the case to the jury?

In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the pre *474 sumption is that the service lines located upon the land of the abutting owner and attached to fixtures or other appliances thereon are the property of such abutting owner. The record in this case contains no evidence to rebut that presumption.

Ownership of the service pipe, however, was not an indispensable requisite to liability. If the pipe were under the exclusive control of the gas company, there should be a duty to inspect, Groff v. Charleston-Dunbar Natural Gas Co., 110 W. Va., 54, 156 S. E., Washington Gas Light Co. v. District of Columbia, 161 U. S., 316, 16 S. Ct., 564, 40 L. Ed., 712; and, even in the absence of such exclusive control, there might still be liability for failure to take proper measures of safety, if notice of a defect or other dangerous condition were brought to the company’s attention. Northwestern Ohio Natural Gas Co. v. First Congregational Church of Toledo, 126 Ohio St., 140, 184 N. E., 512. There was, however, no evidence of notice.

The case, therefore, comes down to this: Can such control as carries with it the duty to inspect and repair be inferred from the facts that the service pipe was used only to transport the company’s gas from the street main into the plaintiff’s building, and that the meters were owned, connected to the pipes, and controlled by'the defendant?

In the opinion of the majority of the Court of Appeals “there was some evidence or rather some facts from which a slight inference of the necessary ownership or control might be drawn,” enough in their opinion to constitute a “scintilla.”

We agree with the majority judges that the inference to be so drawn was “slight,” and that the case should not have gone to the jury unless the trial judge was bound to submit it to them by reason of the “scintilla rule.”

The case, therefore, squarely presents the question whether “the scintilla rule” is law. In Ohio certain *475 of the Courts of Appeals, like the court below in the instant case, are of the opinion that this rule is no longer law. Others are equally of the opinion that the rule still obtains. Clark Restaurant Co. v. Rau, 41 Ohio App., 23, 179 N. E., 196; La Dow, Admr., v. Balti more & Ohio Rd. Co., 40 Ohio App., 458, 178 N. E., 697; Coleman, an Infant, v. Columbus Gas & Fuel Co., 40 Ohio App., 534, 179 N. E., 749; Palatine Ins. Co. v. Buckeye Stages, Inc., 32 Ohio Law Rep., 48; Giddens v. Cleveland Ry. Co., 37 Ohio App., 8, 174 N. E., 22.

2 Thompson on Trials (2d Ed.), Section 2246, defines the scintilla rule as follows: “Where there is any evidence, however slight, tending to support a material issue, the case must go to the jury * * Substantially the same statement occurs in 14 Encyclopedia of Evidence, 102; 1 Chamberlayne, Evidence, Section 396; 5 Wigmore, Evidence (2d Ed.), 2494; and, if it be assumed that the rule applies to every material issue in the case, this statement may fairly be said to express the doctrine as it has been understood in this state. Ellis & Morton v. Ohio Life Insurance & Trust Co., 4 Ohio St., 628, at page 648, 64 Am. Dec., 610; Gibbs v. Village of Girard, 88 Ohio St., 34, at page 41, 102 N. E., 299.

Few, if any, of the other states now observe this rule.

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Bluebook (online)
189 N.E. 246, 127 Ohio St. 469, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 469, 1934 Ohio LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamden-lodge-no-517-v-ohio-fuel-gas-co-ohio-1934.