Laclede Gas Light Co. v. Gas Consumers Ass'n

106 S.W. 91, 127 Mo. App. 442, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 519
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 91 (Laclede Gas Light Co. v. Gas Consumers Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laclede Gas Light Co. v. Gas Consumers Ass'n, 106 S.W. 91, 127 Mo. App. 442, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 519 (Mo. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

Plaintiff and defendant are both corporations doing business in the city of St. Louis. Plaintiff manufactures and supplies gas to resident and business houses in said city for illuminating and fuel purposes. Its gas is carried to the consumer by pressure and force of gravity, through pipes laid by the company. Plaintiff’s service pipes penetrate the basement walls of the buildings where gas is consumed and are there connected with meters furnished and installed by plaintiff at its expense. The pipes leading from the gas mains laid in the streets to the houses are called inlet or service pipes, and the gas flows through these pipes into the meter and from the meter into the house pipes, which are connected with the meter. What are termed in the evidence “the house pipes,” are installed by the owner of the house and run horizontally between the floor and the ceiling of the basement, and are ordinarily brought near the place where the meter is to be located, and are connected with the meter by nipples and, when necessary, additional pipes are furnished by the gas company. A nipple only is used when the house pipes reach within eight inches of the meter; when they do not, additional pipe must be used to make the connection. A nipple in gas fitting, according to the evidence, is a piece of gas pipe eight inches or less in length, with threads cut on either end. In installing meters the company supplies the nipples and, generally, additional pipe when necessary to connect the meter with the house pipe, if the distance does not exceed twelve feet; if the distance is more than twelve feet, the owner of the house is expected to furnish the extra pipe. From the oral and photographic evidence in the record, it appears that prior to 1904, plaintiff company used lead pipe to make meter connection; that during the year 1903, it took out all the old meters and lead pipe, installed new meters and made the connections with iron pipe and sealed these connections. The reasons given [445]*445for making this change are that the iron pipes hold the. meter in a rigid position, whereas the lead pipes did •not do so; that the iron pipes prevent the meters from getting out of plumb and. the lead ones did not; that the iron pipes Avere installed for the further reason it was an easy matter to disconnect the meter from the lead pipes and then connect the service pipe with the house pipes by means of a rubber tube and that this practice had been indulged in by some of plaintiff’s patrons to the loss of plaintiff. Another reason for making the change was to prevent the defendant company from attaching its governor to the inside pipes furnished by plaintiff. The gas regulator is described as folIoavs: “An automatic machine for governing and regulating the pressure of gas; it is placed on the pipes after the gas has passed the meter; our apparatus is to keep the flow of the gas even, stop all over-pressure or wasting. ... It Avill control the capacity—the capacity of the machine is equal to the capacity of the pipe that goes into it. The capacity of the machine, in other Avords, is equal to the output of the meter.” The machine automatically regulates the pressure.

Defendant company is engaged in installing gas regulators in the city of St. Louis, and has about two thousand such machines in use in the said city. Defendant’s evidence tends to show that the pressure of gas as furnished by plaintiff is at times uneven and very irregular, and that its machine remedies this irregularity; • that prior to the year 1903, it installed its machines by disconnecting the lead pipe with the meter, then inserted the machine and reconnected the pipe with the meter; that when lead pipe Aims used this could be done without in the least disturbing the position of the meter, or injuring it or any of its parts; that after the iron pipe connections were made and the connections sealed, a disconnection could not be made without breaking the seals, and plaintiff refused to remove the seals to alloAV [446]*446defendant to install its regulator; that on account of this condition of affairs, in order to place the regulator, defendant was forced to cut the nipple or the pipe running up from the meter to the house pipe; and plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that by this method of installation, defendant cut pipes and nipples which plaintiff had furnished to make connections and the operation disturbed the position of the meters, at times broke parts of them, caused them to leak and broke the seals, and otherwise damaged the meters and their connections. The suit is in equity to enjoin defendant from in anywise interfering with plaintiff’s meters, pipes and nipples it has in úse, or may hereafter have in use.

The decree, as modified by the trial court (omitting caption), is as follows:

“Now this fourteenth day of June, 1907, defendant’s motion to alter and modify the decree heretofore entered in this cause, on to-wit, the sixth day of March, 1907, having been duly considered by the court, the said motion is sustained and said decree so altered and modified as to read as follows:

“Wherefore, it is by the court ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant and its agents and servants be and they hereby are and each of them is, perpetually enjoined, from attaching gas regulators or governors to any of the pipes or nipples belonging to the plaintiff company, and by it placed in position in any of the buildings or dwellings1 in the city of St. Louis, for the purpose of connecting its gas meters with the-house pipes in said buildings and dwellings and through which pipes or nipples, so owned and placed by said plaintiff company, the said plaintiff company supplies gas to siuch buildings or dwellings, and from cutting the pipes and nipples, or disturbing or in any manner interfering with the unions or connections made between the said pipes and nipples so belonging and placed in position by said plaintiff company, and its meters [447]*447and the said house pipes in said buildings and dwellings, except as hereinafter decreed, or from in any manner interfering with the meters, meter connections, meter seals and locks belonging to said plaintiff company, and installed in position by said plaintiff company in any of the buildings or dwellings in the city of St. Louis; provided that whenever the defendant shall have received the written directions and authority from the owner or occupant of any building or dwelling in the city of St. Louis, to install its gas regulator on the house gaspipe belonging to such building or dwelling, and such owner or- occupant shall, in writing, notify the plaintiff of such fact and in such notice designate a day and hour, not less than three days in advance of the service of such notice on plaintiff, when such owner or occupant desires and intends to have installed such regulator, and request plaintiff to furnish a capable gas fitter to then and there, or prior thereto on the day mentioned in such notice and between eight o’clock a. m. and three o’clock p. m., shut off the gas supply from such premises and disconnect plaintiff’s pipe, nipple or meter connection on the outlet side of its meter, from the house pipe belonging to such building or dwelling, at the union between the same, so as to enable defendant to install its regulator on the house pipe belonging to such building or dwelling, and to thereafter reconnect such pipe, nipple or meter connections belonging to plaintiff, with such house pipe, and agree to pay or authorize the charge against him of the reasonable cost of furnishing such gas fitter for such work, and provided that, should the plaintiff fail on such notice, and on the day mentioned therein and between the hours of eight a. m.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 91, 127 Mo. App. 442, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laclede-gas-light-co-v-gas-consumers-assn-moctapp-1907.