Jennings v. Davis

187 F. 703, 109 C.C.A. 451, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4213
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 13, 1911
DocketNo. 1,015
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 187 F. 703 (Jennings v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennings v. Davis, 187 F. 703, 109 C.C.A. 451, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4213 (4th Cir. 1911).

Opinion

CONNOR, District Judge.

This is an action on the case instituted in the circuit court of Wetzell county and removed into the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of West Virginia. The purpose of the action is to recover damages sustained by the _ alleged negligence of- the plaintiffs in error, hereinafter called defendants, by the destruction of the property of defendant in error, hereinafter called plaintiff. The cause was duly brought to trial before the court and jury. From a judgment upon a verdict for plaintiff, defendants duly assigned error and brought the record to this court for review.

, The facts, in regard to which there was no substantial controversy, 'disclose this case: Plaintiff was on and prior to December 8, Í903, [705]*705the owner of a dwelling used as a boarding house, a barn, and anotner house used as a blacksmith shop by some person not under the control of plaintiff. All of said buildings were located on a farm leased by plaintiff in Wetzell county, W. Va. Defendants, residents of the state of Pennsylvania, owned a pipe line used to convey petroleum oil from the place of production in Wetzell county to Pittsburg, Pa. _ They maintained a six-inch trunk oil pipe line laid along the north side of the public road upon the same side of which plaintiff, subsequent to the laying of the pipe line, built the houses described in the declaration. A mile or so west of said buildings, defendants maintained at West Grove a pumping station which forced the oil through the six-inch pipe into Pennsylvania, its final destination. At about 75 feet of plaintiff’s house, defendants had inserted a Y joint, into which ran and connected a four-inch branch oil pipe line running off at an angle and in a northwesterly direction to Wileyville pumping station, distant about a mile from the Y connection. In the four-inch branch line, about five feet from the connection, was inserted a flange or joint, the two parts of which were drawn and fastened together with bolts, and for the purpose of making a close connection, which could not be made with the metal, a thin piece of rubber — from a sixteenth to a thirty-second of an inch in thickness and technically called a gasket- — was inserted between the faces of the two halves of the flange. When the bolts were tightened, the rubber was flattened, and the connection made tight and safe. Between the flange and the Y connection, in the six-inch main line, was installed a gate or valve operated by a wheel on top, which, when turned, closed the valve and stopped the flow of oil through the four-inch line. Defendants employed a man whose duty it was to make daily inspections of the four-inch line and of this flange. The Wileyville pump station on the four-inch line and the Pine Grove station on the six-inch line could not be operated at the same time. The defendants operated the Wileyville station during the day, shutting it down about 6 o’clock in the evening, and operated the Pine Grove station during the night.

On the night of December 7, 1903, at about 8 o’clock, Mrs. Adams who hi the absence of' plaintiff looked after his boarding house, in stepping from the front porch of the house discovered oil upon the ground which came from a leak in the flange. She telephoned the operator at Pine Grove station that oil was escaping, and that it might result in serious injury or some serious accident. She testified that some one at the station at Pine Grove answered, requesting her to ascertain where tile break in the line was — that she sent three men to look for the leak, and they informed her that it was in the four-inch line near the junction with the six-inch line — and that she immediately telephoned this information to the station. Mr. Maxwell testified that he liad charge of the barn; that he reached there about 8 o’clock on the night of December 7, 1903, and discovered that oil was escaping and running around the house and barn to such an extent that he. regarded it as dangerous, and at once directed the outdoor lights between the barn and the house to be put out and directed that all lights and fires be kept out of the stables and from around the house; that [706]*706he at once telephoned the Pine Grove station, notifying the men there that oil was escaping, and that attention should be given the matter at once; that there was danger of burning the property; and that some one answered that they would have the matter looked after. There was evidence on the part of plaintiff that two persons at the house heard the pulsating or throbbing df the pump until late at night. Defendants’ witness, Robert Rynd, testified that he was in the employment of defendants as one of the “Connection gang”; that he had made it his business to go over that line every day; that he was away on December 7, 1903, at other work, and did not get in until about 7:30 o’clock; that he went up the line before he ate supper to see that it was all right; that he went to the place of the leak, found oil on the ground; it was caused by the gasket blowing out of the flange — in the four-inch line — about four or five feet from the junction with the six-inch line; that there was a gate or valve between the flange and the six-inch line. He describes this as :

“A casting made on the same principle as the valve on a range. It has a stem, with a wheel on one end and a sliding valve at the other end. When you turn the wheel and open the valve, the oil goes through, and. when you turn it the other way, it closes the valve, so that nothing can get through. I closed the gate the first thing — tight—with a stick — that is, put a stick in the spokes of the wheel so that I could make it tight. It could not leak at all; it was impossible. The Wileyville pump station is on the four-inch line about half a mile away — perhaps a little more. This pump was not working when I got to the flange.” •

He said that he could not repair the leak that night very well, the oil made it dangerous, danger of igniting; that he went there the next morning shortly after 7 o’clock to repair the leak, took the line apart, took out the bolts, and put in a new gasket, screwed tip the holts, and tightened the flange. That, when he tightened up the valve the night before it took the pressure off the four-inch line. He estimates that about two of three barrels of oil leaked out before he got to the leak; that he had been going over the line daily to see that it was all right — that it was in goocf condition. He describes the gasket as a thin rubber packing — the thinner the better — that goes in between the flanges. He says that only a part of the gasket had blown out “about the size of a darning needle or may be not so large.” It was very small — hardly noticeable. He said that there would be no throbbing — probably a little “sizzling noise” — just like water being forced out of a little hole. The other witnesses introduced hy defendants corroborated this witness in regard to the construction of the pipe line, flange, gate, gasket, and its condition when examined, etc. Plaintiff introduced no testimony upon this phase of the case.

Rynd also testified that he went to plaintiff’s house the next morning, saw the oil; that it ran “around below the house and then down along the line about 200 feet; that it stopped under the blacksmith shop, eould see it on the ground and under the shop floor, about 2 feet from the ground.” lie also testified that he went to plaintiff’s house the night of the 7th of December, saw woman there; that she told him the oil had been escaping and running under the house; that he knew this from what he saw at the line.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 F. 703, 109 C.C.A. 451, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-davis-ca4-1911.