Harlan Water Company v. Carter

295 S.W. 426, 220 Ky. 493, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 10, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 426 (Harlan Water Company v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harlan Water Company v. Carter, 295 S.W. 426, 220 Ky. 493, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 550 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Affirming.

A 'brick building owned by tbe appellee, J. B. Carter, who was tbe plaintiff below, was destroyed' by fire on December 28, 1925, and, alleging that the value of tbe building was $10,000, tbe plaintiff brought this action against tbe Harlan Water Company to recover that sum on tbe ground that tbe defendant’s failure to supply a. sufficient pressure of water to enable tbe city fire department to extinguish tbe fire was tbe proximate cause of the loss. By an amended petition it was alleged that, in addition to tbe fact that no water was in tbe reservoir, tbe defendant bad installed its hydrants in sucb a negligent manner, or bad permitted them to become so out of repair, that by reason of their defective condition they were not self-draining, and tbe water therein froze and tbe fire department could not use them to extinguish tbe fire.

Tbe proof tended to show that the building was worth from $8,000 to $10,000 and it developed that plaintiff bad collected insurance in tbe amount of $5,000 on tbe building. Tbe jury, in its verdict, found that tbe value of tbe building at tbe time of tbe fire was $8,000, 'and, as instructed by tbe court, credited that amount with *495 the amount of insurance that had been collected, and found against the defendant in the sum of $3,000.

The Harlan Water Company supplied water to the city of Harlan under a written contract the portions of which, material to this controversy, are as follows:

(2) “The said water plant, when completed and installed ready for use, shall have the pressure and ■supply sufficient for a population of sis thousand inhabitants. ’ ’
(3) “All of the mains which convey the water shall be buried or placed of sufficient depth below the surface of the ground that none of them will be affected or injured in any way by frost or freezing, and, when necessary in the process of construction to cross any stream of water about Harlan, said mains or water pipes shall.be laid below the ordinary bottom of the stream, a sufficient depth, and so encased in concrete of a sufficient thickness and strength to protect them from floods' or other injuries or misfortune.”
(4) “The said city council, party of the first part, subscribes to' and agrees to pay for forty-five hydrants to :be used for protection against fire, at $40 each per year for a period of ten years from this date. Said hydrants shall be two-faced ,and self-draining. The payments- for said hydrants shall be made quarterly.”

When the contract was renewed in 1924, the amount to be paid by the city for fire hydrants was increased from $40 each per year to $55 per year.

At about 11 o’clock on the night of December 27, 1925, a fire occurred in a building adjoining the building of the plaintiff. The city fire department arrived within a reasonable time and attached the hose to two hydrants, one about 50 feet and one about 1001 feet from-plaintiff’s property. When the hose was first attached, there was no water in the mains, and, before the water was turned on and pressure secured, the fire had gained such headway that the building adjoining the one owned by appellee was practically destroyed, but the fire was finally gotten under control without any damage having been done to plaintiff’s property, and members of the fire department, thinking the fire was out, turned the water off at the two hydrants, and left. About 6 o’clock *496 the next morning it was discovered that this fire was still burning. The fire department responded within a reasonable time with their hose and equipment, :but, when they attached their ho.se to the two hydrants that had been opened the night before, they found the water in the hydrants or mains had frozen and would not flow through the hose. They then went to a third hydrant located at the corner of Main and Clover streets, which had not been used the night before, and 'found the water in this hydrant frozen. These were the only hydrants to which the hose could be attached and reach appellee’s building and, being unable to secure any water through any of these hydrants, the fire department could do nothing toward putting out the fire and the building was destroyed.

The rule, although contrary to the holding of the great majority of courts, has been announced in a number of decisions, by this court that, where a water company has contracted with a city to furnish a supply of water sufficient for the protection of property within the city against fire, a citizen may sue to recover damages sustained by him on account of the failure of the water company to perform its contract. The Paducah Lumber Company v. Paducah Water Supply Company, 89 Ky. 340, 12 S. W. 554, 13 S. W. 249, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 738, 7 L. R. A. 77, 25 Am. St. Rep. 536; Mountain Water Company v. Davis, 195 Ky. 195, 241 S. W. 801.

It is clearly established that the city had an amply equipped and competent fire department, and that the department responded promptly when the alarm was given, and that, when they arrived on the scene, the fire had made little headway, and, if water had been obtainable, the fire could have been easily extinguished.

It is 'earnestly insisted by appellant that the failure of the water to flow through its hydrants was not caused by any fault or neglect on its part, but by the freezing of the hydrants which was caused by an act of Gcd. The weather was very cold when the fire occurred, the temperature being near zero, but there is no proof that this condition was unusual, or that, if appellant’s mains, and hydrants had been properly installed and maintained water therein would freeze under such conditions. There was proof tending to show that, if coarse gravel, broken stone, or cinders in sufficient quantity had been placed at the base of the fire hydrants, an outlet would have *497 been formed for the water which would drain through the vent holes in the hydrants, and that it would drain with sufficient rapidity to prevent freezing’. It is conceded that the type of fire plug used by appellant was the approved and standard type and the proof tended to show that such a fire plug would have drained itself without freezing under conditions similar to those, existing at the time the fire occurred, if properly installed and maintained. Not only was the water frozen in the two hydrants that had been used at the first fire, but the one at the corner of Main and Clover streets, which had not been used, was frozen and could not be used at the time the second fire occurred. This would indicate that it had not been so installed or maintained as to be self-draining, as required by the contract between the city and the water company. It is shown that, if this hydrant had been in working condition at the time of the fire, the fire department couldJbave used it, as they had sufficient hose to extend from it to appellee’s building.

The appellant also complains of the instructions, but they substantially conform to those that have been approved by this court in similar cases. In instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 426, 220 Ky. 493, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlan-water-company-v-carter-kyctapphigh-1927.