Kendall v. People's Gas & Fuel Co.

158 So. 254
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1935
DocketNo. 4918.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 158 So. 254 (Kendall v. People's Gas & Fuel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kendall v. People's Gas & Fuel Co., 158 So. 254 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MILLS, Judge.

Plaintiffs are the owners of a house and lot facing south on East Arizona avenue in the town of Ruston. The space between the front property line and the curbing, used as a sidewalk, is owned by the municipality. Civil Code, art. 458.

This space is partly paved with the usual cement strip which leaves an unpaved portion or neutral ground about ten feet wide between the cement and the curb. In this neutral ground throughout the length of the street the property owners have' planted oak trees, now about thirty years old, and of such a size that their limbs meet across the street. Three of these trees stood in front of plaintiffs’ property, one near the east line, the next within a few feet of the paved driveway, which is on the west side of the house, and the third in the small unpaved space between plaintiffs’ driveway and that of their neighbors. In addition to their beauty and esthetic value, they served a practical purpose in shading the house, porch, and lawn in the summer afternoons. The presence of the trees appreciably increased the market value of plaintiffs’ property.

The middle tree, after deteriorating-throughout the summer and fall of 1929, died, *255 and was cut down in the spring of 1930. The one between the driveways became seriously affected during the summer of 1932; the few green leaves remaining on it during the hot months giving little shade and comfort. It expired in the fall, and was removed in April, 1933.

Plaintiffs were unaware of the cause of the loss of these trees until November 4, 1932. On that date children playing in front of the house noticed sand or earth bubbling up in the neutral ground. Their efforts to unearth the expected doodle bug proving futile, one of the boys dropped a lighted match upon the agitated section. The resulting flame aroused the Kendalls, who notified the gas company. They immediately sent a representative, who dug down until a leak in the service pipe was disclosed. This service pipe connects the house of plaintiffs with the main of defendant, which is located beneath the paving, in the middle of the street.

On May 31, 1933, plaintiffs filed this suit, demanding of the gas company $2,000 for damages to and depreciation of the value of their property, alleged to be the “result of the negligence of the Peoples Gas & Fuel Company, Incorporated, in wrongfully allowing the leakage and escape of natural gas from the service pipe.”

Defendant, in bar of the action, pleaded the prescription of one year. It also excepted that the petition did not state a cause or right of action because the only allegation of negligence, which we have quoted above, is a mere conclusion of the pleader, unsupported by any statement of fact.

The plea and exception were not passed on in limine, but were expressly overruled in the final judgment, which rejected plaintiffs’ de-. mand on the merits. Prom this judgment plaintiffs have appealed, and defendant has answered, praying that it be affirmed in so far as it rejects, on the merits, the demand, and amended in so far as it overrules the plea and exception. The defendant wishes to retain the judgment in its favor on the merits and at the same time have that judgment amended so as to dismiss plaintiffs’ suit on the plea and exception, a.manifestly inconsistent and impossible decree. We will therefore not pass upon the plea and exception, but confine our review of the case to the judgment on the merits.

Defendant denies the material allegations of plaintiffs and in an amended answer, in the alternative, pleads contributory negligence, in that the service line was owned and installed by plaintiffs, whose duty it is to maintain and inspect it, defendant being under no obligation in regard to same until a break or leak is reported to them; tlfet plaintiffs were negligent in not sooner discovering and reporting the leak.

On February 9, 1925, by proper ordinance, T. L. James was granted a franchise for the distribution and sale of natural gas in the town of Ruston. It provides that “the grantee shall make all taps in the mains and the consumers shall run their service lines from said tap. No charge whatever is to be made to the-consumers by the grantee for tapping their main.” It is proven that the service pipe from the main to the house was installed by a plumber employed and paid by the property owners, and that the connection at the main was made by defendant.

The franchise further provides that in the construction, operation, and repair of its distributing system the grantee shall use every reasonable and proper precaution to avoid inflicting damages or injury to persons or property, and shall hold the grantor “harmless from any claim for damage, injury, loss or expense caused by the negligence of grantee.” It provides further that “such operations shall be under the supervision of the City authorities and subject to their inspection.” It is not disputed that defendant company is operating by assignment under this franchise.

Defendant denies that the trees were killed by escaping gas. It shows by expert testimony that their virility was greatly lessened by the curtailment of their food area ■ by the pavement of the street, sidewalk, and driveways ; that their deterioration over a number of years is shown by the rings in the preserved stump. Plaintiffs’ expert testified that the element in gas fatal to vegetation is monoxide. A chemist who analyzed natural gas for defendant says that it contains no monoxide or other gases injurious to plants. Monoxide is found in large quantities in man-, ufact;ured gas. A severe drouth prevailed in Ruston within the period of the decline of these trees. On the other hand, it is shown that the soil in the area affected was unusually hard and caked; that vegetation and shrubbery would not grow in it; that, after-the leak was repaired, the remaining tree regained its vigor, and vegetation and shrubbery flourished. We do not disagree with the trial judge’s finding of fa'ct that the gas killed the trees.

At the outset, defendant contends that, assuming the existence of the other elements o'f liability, a property owner cannot recover for

*256 damage caused by tbe death of trees standing and growing on public property.

Plaintiffs base their claim on two theories: hirst, that an abutting*property owner has a servitude in the use of trees in the street as well as in the use of the street itself. Servi-tudes in this state are governed by our codal provisions; we find no mention in them of a servitude of shade. We can find no case which disputes the right of an owner to cut down trees growing on his own land. To the contrary, an adjacent owner can compel the removal of limbs which extend over his premises. If an abutting owner enjoyed a servitude in the shade trees along the sidewalk, the city would be powerless in many cases to widen or improve the streets.

In Tissot v. Great Southern Tel. & Tel. Co., 39 La. Ann. 996, 3 So. 261, 262, 4 Am. St. Rep. 248, it is held: “There is no doubt that the streets and sidewalks of a city are not subject to any proprietary right or interest on the part of abutting proprietors” — citing Irwin v. Telephone Company, 37 La. Ann. 67, and Hill v. Railroad Company, 38 La. Ann. 606.

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158 So. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendall-v-peoples-gas-fuel-co-lactapp-1935.