Helm v. Manufacturers Light & Heat Co.

104 S.E. 59, 86 W. Va. 628, 25 A.L.R. 240, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 168
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 104 S.E. 59 (Helm v. Manufacturers Light & Heat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helm v. Manufacturers Light & Heat Co., 104 S.E. 59, 86 W. Va. 628, 25 A.L.R. 240, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 168 (W. Va. 1920).

Opinion

POEEENBARGER, JUDGE :

The judgment for $3,500.00 under review on this writ of error was recovered in an action for damages for a personal injury, alleged to have been caused by the negligence.of the defendant, a corporation supplying natural gas for light and fuel, in respect of its gas mains, pipes and meter. A wife sues for the injury, her husband joining her in the action. The specific assignments of error challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the' verdict and the correctness of a certain instruction given at the ' instance of the plaintiffs.

In the second count of the declaration and the evidence, the charge of negligence is limited to alleged defectiveness of the meter connections and conduct of the defendant respecting the same. The theory of the plaintiffs is that, by reason of the sliding of the ground over which the meter stood and an accumulation of ice on the meter, a connection between it and the servicé pipe, called in some places a union and in others a brass or bronze nipple, brolle and permitted an escape of gas which found its' way into the building in which the plantiffs resided, and, being accidentally ignited by a match struck by the female plaintiff, caused an explosion in which she was knocked down and severely' burned, notably about the head, arms and chest. The house, a one-story, three-room, frame structure, had a kitchen and cellar1 under a portion of it, made by an excavation in a hillside and enclosed by a hollow tile wall which, conforming to the horizontal dimensions of the house, constituted its foundation. The explosion occurred in the cellar and-kitchen and the gas or other explosive substance seems to have been in the former. At about 5:30 A. M. February 9,1918, something like a half an hour after the husband had come down into'the kitchen and refreshed the' coal fire with a bucket of coal procured from the cellar and lit a lamp, and almost immediately after the wife came down, the latter opened the cellar door and struck a match on or about it, intending to enter the cellar for some meat, and the explosion occurred. She was rendered unconscious, her clothing set on fire [631]*631and gas pipes broken inside of the building from which gas escaped and was ignited by her burning clothing. For some reason there were two explosions in close succession. As soon as' possible, the huband went to the meter and shut off the gas. The flames were extinguished and the gas pipe connections restored by neighbors.

In this work of restoration, evidence of the cause of the explosion, relied upon by both plaintiffs and defendant, was discovered; a broken connection in the cellar made one of the principal grounds of the defense. and a broken connection at the! meter, relied upon by the plaintiffs, in connection with. other facts, as proof of negligence on the part of the defendant. ,If the break in the cellar occurred before the explosion, the gas causing the injury no doubt accumulated there in consequence, and, as the defendant was not responsible for the safety or main-1 tenance of that pipe, it admittedly would not be liable under the' circumstances. On the other hand, as it owned, controlled and had placed the meter, there may be liability if the accumulated gas came from the bréale found in the meter connection. Thd meter was disturbed by the explosion and it is insisted that the break in that connection was a result, not a cause, of the accident.

Claiming that, if either break antedated and caused it, the probabilities as to which of them did so are equal, the defendant invokes the well settled legal proposition that, in such a case, a verdict against the defendant cannot be permitted to stand, because the plaintiff, carrying the burden of proof and being bound to make out a case of negligence afflrmatively, has not succeeded in doing so. Moore v. Heat & Light Co., 65 W. Va. 552; Jacobs v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 68 W. Va. 618.

There is evidence in the case, however, giving the theory of the plaintiffs an emphasis not possessed by that of the defendant and tending to disprove the latter. The connection in the cellar had efficiently and safely performed its function for more' than two years and there is no evidence tending to prove disturbance of it at anytime prior to the explosion. It was a bushing used near the cellar door in reducing the inch pipe which entered the cellar from the meter, passing through the weatherboarding over the hollow tile wall and going up the wall inside and then along the' [632]*632joists or rafters, to a quarter or three eighths of an inch, before it passed into the kitchen' through the south' facing of the door in the partition. Some of the expert witnesses disapprove its use, but others commend it. After the explosion, the pipe in'which it was, or of which it formed a part, was found to have been bent, as a result of a six inch outward dislocation, by the explosion, of the wall from which the inch pipe came and to which it was attached. This circumstance tends to prove that the bushing was unbroken before the explosion and that, at that instant, it was strong enough to hold until the pipe had bent under the strain put upon it by the dislocation of the wall, resulting from the explosion. If there had been a previous disconnection by reason of the break, the pipe being loose at that point, likely would not have bent there. It is highly probable that the bushing was intact and held until the bulging or careening wall, pulling the pipe with it, bent it near the location of the bushing, before the latter gave way. There is evidence tending to prove, in favor of the theory of the plaintiffs, that the meter had never been properly nor, perhaps, safely installed, and also that it had been disturbed in such manner as may have caused the admitted break in the nipple or union, which was discovered after the inside plumbing had been restored. The meter was supported by an upright pipe coming from the ground and the pipe passing over the wall, but it was suspended by these pipes and the connections at a height of about 18 inches from the ground and was otherwise unsupported. In the pipes, there were swinging joints which permitted the meter to be moved in certain directions, without infliction of any strain on the pipes or connections, but not in others. The husband testified very positively that a sliding of the ground at the location of the service pipe and meter had very perceptibly disturbed and dislocated the meter and the upright pipe to which it was attached. In this he is corroborated by a neighbor, Mc-Larighlin, who says the meter “set straight up,” when first put in, but afterwards leaned towards his house and in such manner as to impose a strain on the pipes or connections. Although the explosion thrust the wall out against the meter and disturbed it and may have caused the fracture of the fitting, there was a leak somewhere before the explosion and the jury could find it was [633]*633not inside but outside and, therefore, that the outside fracturé antedated the explosion and emitted the gas. The escaping gas almost certainly came from one of the two admitted fractures. It would subserve no good purpose to set forth in detail all of the evidence here referred to. It is substantial and its tendencies clear and strong. There is a clear prepondeance of evidence in favor of the contention of the plaintiffs.

If,- however, the broken connection at the meter, permitting escape of about 50 cubic feet of gas per hour, antedated the explosion, liability is denied on the ground of lack of proof that the escaping gas entered the cellar, and the tendency of expert testimony adduced, to prove that it did not.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.E. 59, 86 W. Va. 628, 25 A.L.R. 240, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helm-v-manufacturers-light-heat-co-wva-1920.