Louisville Water Co. v. Bosler

433 S.W.2d 105, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 11, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 433 S.W.2d 105 (Louisville Water Co. v. Bosler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville Water Co. v. Bosler, 433 S.W.2d 105, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 255 (Ky. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

Louisville Water Company, Inc., appeals from a judgment entered on a verdict awarding Allan F. and Georgia C. Bosler, d/b/a George Bosler Leather Company, $7,-834.69 for damage done to a stock of merchandise by water from a break in one of the water company’s mains at the intersection of Market and Second Streets in Louisville on December 19, 1963.

The question is whether there was sufficient proof that the break resulted from the water company’s negligence to warrant submission to the jury. We have concluded that there was.

All of the evidence upon which it would be necessary to predicate liability was obtained from Byron E. Payne, the water company’s chief engineer and superintendent, first by interrogatories and then [106]*106through oral testimony. The salient information provided in response to the interrogatories was as follows:

The break was circumferential in an 8" cast iron pipe 15 feet east of the west curb line of Second Street, seven feet north of the south curb line of Market Street.1 The main was three feet deep. The surrounding soil was sand, gravel and clay. Cause of the break is unknown. Possible causes were “cold weather stresses and bending stresses due to settlement.” The main was repaired by replacing a section of pipe and installing a sleeve. The water from the break ran through a “dead sewer line” beneath the south sidewalk of Market Street until it reached a Louisville Gas & Electric Company manhole through which it rose to the street level and flowed into the basement of the Boslers’ store. This particular 8" main runs from a 6" main in Second Street westwardly to Sixth Street. It was installed in 1935. The water company had not taken any special precautionary steps to prevent breaks in the immediate vicinity, because it would be difficult “to explore or replace the soil or other structures such as sewers, gas pipes, etc.” Other breaks in the intersection of Market and Second Streets during the year preceding December 19, 1963, were as follows:

Date Size of pipe
1-24-63 “6"
1-26-63 12"
2-2-63 12"
2-3-63 12"
2-4-63 6"
2-9-63 12"
8-3-63 6"

The evidence adduced through Mr. Payne’s oral testimony was as follows:

On direct examination: Other utilities located beneath the surface of this intersection are gas mains, telephone conduits, electric conduits, and sewers. “The sewer in Second Street is in notoriously bad condition.” It is a very old sewer made of stone blocks covered with stone slabs. It is still in use. The earth is composed of sand, gravel and some clay and is generally called sandy loam. It is typical of the soil in downtown Louisville, which is situated over an old river bed structure. “It would be quite an extensive foundation, to have to construct a foundation under any of our pipe, because it would mean piling a considerable depth, because the sewers are very deep and you would have to support from below the sewers.” The main in question was made of cast iron, which “is used by practically everybody in the business.” It is not customary to “dig up and look at pipes here and there to see if they are all right.” The low weather temperatures during the week prior to and including December 19,1963 were: December 13, 25°; December 14, 9°; December 15, 6°; December 16, 5°; December 17, 8°; December 18, 5°; and December 19, -1°. With respect to the condition of the sewers, “the soil beneath the streets in downtown Louisville, being mostly sand or sandy loam, is a fairly good support as long as it is contained. When there is an opening anywhere, say in a sewer, the sand tends to run into the sewer, and that will take the support from underneath the structure.” It is difficult to discover such a condition “without digging up the whole length of the street.”

On cross-examination: The weather conditions (temperatures) at and prior to the time of the break were not unusual. Under normal conditions the type of water pipes in use should last 100 years. The only occasions on which it is customary for the water company to dig up its pipes are when leaks occur or new connections are being made. Numerous leaks and breaks in one spot “would have some indication of the conditions.” With respect to each of the seven breaks that had occurred in the intersection of Market and Second Streets during 1963 the mains had been uncovered [107]*107so that they could be repaired. In “a couple” of these instances “there were certain repairs made in the sewers.” We continue with direct quotation from the testimony:

Q— “Every time you had one of those breaks it caused a lot of wash and a lot of shifting of soil under Second and Market Streets, didn’t it?”
A— “It could.”
MR. GARLO VE: “He is asking if it did.”
A— “I don’t know.”
Q— “It is reasonable to suppose that it would; isn’t that right?”
A— “Most occasions, most of the wash went into the sewer.”
Q— “But, I said, it is reasonable to suppose that when you have a break in a water main it causes some shifting of the soil in that vicinity; isn’t that right ?”
A— “It might.”
Q— “And when you have seven breaks in one section in one year you know that you have a situation that is in need of something being done about it, don’t you?”
A— “Most of these breaks you are referring to occurred in Second Street, or other than this particular main.”
Q— “But they were in Second Street in the intersection ?”
A— “Yes, sir; and closer to the sewer.”
Q— “I take it that with these breaks you had some reason to believe that you had a great deal of shift in the soil underneath Second and Market Streets, did you not?”
A— “Well, we did have the Sewer Department — called their attention to the sewer, and they did fix the sewer.”
Q— “When did they do that?”
A— “Well, they did that at the occasion of some of these other breaks here. I am not sure just which one, but I know they worked over there.”
Q— “And you kept on having the breaks in that intersection, without considering this to be a time to dig up and see if the mains in that intersection were okay; is that right?”
A— “We didn’t dig them up for that purpose. If we had dug them up we probably wouldn’t have found anything.”
Q— “How do you know that?”
A— “Well, I didn’t dig them up; so I can’t say I know, but we have dug others up that indicates that the ground under them was perfectly firm.”
Q— “But you didn’t dig them up there at Second and Market?”
A— “No.”

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Related

Phelps v. Louisville Water Co.
103 S.W.3d 46 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2003)
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438 S.W.2d 94 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
433 S.W.2d 105, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-water-co-v-bosler-kyctapp-1968.