Lane v. Community Natural Gas Co.

123 S.W.2d 639, 133 Tex. 128, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 280
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1939
DocketNo. 7195.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 639 (Lane v. Community Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Community Natural Gas Co., 123 S.W.2d 639, 133 Tex. 128, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 280 (Tex. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sharp

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On February 12, 1933, the wife of S. E. Lane died as a result of injuries received in a gas explosion, which had occurred the previous afternoon in the kitchen of her apartment *130 in Belton, Texas. Plaintiff alleged negligence against the defendant in permitting its gas to flow through unsafe equipment in the Lane apartment. The case was submitted to the jury-on special issues, and by virtue of the jury’s answers to such issues the trial court entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant. The case was appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, and the judgment of the trial court was reversed and the cause rendered in favor of the defendant. 97 S. W. (2d) 703. A writ of error was granted.

Plaintiff in error contends that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in reversing and rendering this cause on the holding that a gas company is under no duty to make any character of inspection in an apartment house occupied by two families, one of which is a nonsubscriber of gas, where such gas company knew both apartments to be piped and equipped for gas at the time it turned its gas into one of the apartments.

The testimony relating to certain facts is conflicting, and since the jury has passed upon such testimony and found in favor of plaintiff in error, we will not set out in detail all of the testimony, but will state only the salient facts, which are as follows: The house in which plaintiff in error and his wife resided was originally a single residence and was owned by W. A. Gilmer. Several years before the accident, Gilmer had such residence converted into two apartments, facing east, which were designated and referred to as the “north” and “south” apartments; and each apartment was, for a time thereafter, supplied with gas through separate meters stationed at the front of the building near the sidewalk. The house had' but one bathroom, which was used by the tenants of both apartments. Said bathroom was situated in the south apartment. Sometime after, said house was converted into a duplex, and while said apartments were being supplied from two separate meters, the owner thereof, W. A. Gilmer, employed a plumber to install in said house a by-pass which connected the two gas pipe systems to said apartments. This by-pass tapped the bathroom heater line between the heater and the cutoff, and was supplied with its own cutoff. It extended under the bathroom and over to and connected with the north apartment system of gas pipes. This arrangement was made in order that the tenant in each apartment, when using the bathroom, might heat the bath water by means of gas through the system of pipe supplying his side of the house, and connecting with his separate meter.

Following the installation of this arrangement of piping, *131 the tenant then occupying said apartments moved therefrom in August, 1931, and the defendant in error removed its two meters from in front of said dwelling. Both apartments remained vacant for some time. In the latter part of June, 1932, plaintiff in error and his wife moved into the north apartment. They did not subscribe for natural gas from the defendant in error, and were not using natural gas; each being unfamiliar with the use and behavior of this commodity, and unfamiliar with gas plumbing and fittings. In November of said year plaintiff in error and his wife were out of town and away from their apartment for a few weeks. When they returned, on Thanksgiving Day, 1932, they found that the south apartment was no longer vacant, but was occupied by Mrs. Hargrove and her young daughter. When Mrs. Hargrove moved into the south apartment, she applied to defendant in error for a gas meter to be installed, her cook stove connected, and gas turned into the soiith apartment. Upon such, application, J. E. Hill, agent and employee of the defendant in error, installed a meter at the south apartment, installed the cook stove of Mrs. Hargrove, and, according to his own testimony, turned the gas on, without any inspection or observation whatever. No inspection was made of piping or fittings inside the building.

The facts further show that the agent of defendant in error knew at the time he turned the gas into the south apartment that the north apartment was occupied by tenants, who had not applied for natural gas; that he knew that Mrs. Hargrove and her daughter were to be the only occupants of the south apartment, and knew that they were not responsible persons with reference to knowledge of gas, plumbing, fittings, etc. Said agent further testified that natural gas is a silent, invisible, dangerous, and explosive substance, somewhat mysterious in its composition and behavior. The facts further show that Mrs. Hargrove had complained to said agent, Hill, that the gas range, when in operation, gave off odors; and she was informed by such agent that this was due to the fact that the burners did not effect a complete combustion of the gas. Nothing was done to correct this.

The by-pass that connected the systems of pipes in the north and south apartments was complex, in that the same contained globe valves, jets, cutoffs, and other appliances above the floor in the bathroom. The system, while understandable to an experienced plumber or gas fitter, was complex and incomprehensible to an ordinary person. As the agent of the defendant in error, Hill, expressed it: “It was a tangled-up affair.” It was shown that the cutoffs used in said bathroom on *132 the gas pipes were globe valves, which were designed and made for water cutoffs. It was further shown that said valves sometimes did not close securely, and that they were not the modern safe equipment used as gas cutoffs. It was also shown that the meter test used by the agent of defendant in error in testing the pipes when he turned the gas on in the Hargrove apartment did not always properly record the true situation.

The testimony further shows that plaintiff in error’s wife assisted him downtown in the fruit and produce business, staying in said place of business during the daytime while the plaintiff in error was away buying products. On February 11, 1933, Mrs. Lane returned to her home from her work downtown in the late afternoon. Stopping in the Hargrove apartment, she conversed with Mrs. Hargrove and guests for a few minutes and departed from said apartment to her own apartment with the statement that she would prepare supper. Immediately after she entered her own apartment a violent explosion took place in her kitchen, setting fire to her clothing and inflicting wounds from which she died the following day. Following the explosion, which wrecked the entire north apartment, it was found that a gas flame was burning from an uncapped gas pipe in the Lane kitchen. Said gas pipe was situated near an oil stove which was used by Mrs. Lane in preparing meals. The plaintiff in error testified that he had never seen a cap on said pipe while he resided in said apartment. The evidence tends to show that an experienced plumber or gas fitter, upon entering the bathroom of said apartments and seeing the gas cutoffs, cocks, and valves situated therein, which were in plain and open view, would have had it suggested to him that said bathroom was supplied by gas through pipes from two different directions or systems.

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123 S.W.2d 639, 133 Tex. 128, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-community-natural-gas-co-tex-1939.