Loyocano v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.

165 So. 515
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 1936
DocketNo. 16251.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 165 So. 515 (Loyocano v. Louisiana Power & Light 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
Loyocano v. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 165 So. 515 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Jacob Loyocano and his wife, as tenants, occupied an apartment in a building in Gretna, La. In the' building were other apartments and commercial establishments.

Louisiana Power & Light Company, a producer and furnisher of gas for domestic and commercial purposes, had installed gas meters through which it furnished gas to the various occupants of the building.

Loyocano and his wife were not users of gas, though defendant company had not removed the meter which had been installed to serve former tenants who had previously occupied the same apartment.

Plaintiff brings this suit against the said company claiming $30,000 for physical injuries, loss of personal effects and furniture, loss of earnings, and for expenses of illness which resulted from an explosion of escaping^ gas in the apartment and which gas escaped, according to the allegations of Loyocano’s petition, because of the negligence of employees of defendant company.

He alleges that on the 5th of December, 1934, he and his wife left the apartment at about. 6 :30 o’clock p. m. and that on their return at about 10 :30 o’clock that night, as they entered the apartment he struck a match for the purpose of lighting an oil heater, and that there was a violent explosion which destroyed his furniture and clothing and severely burned him, particularly about the face and hands. He makes thq following charges of negligence:

(1) That defendant was negligent in not capping the ends of all gas pipes in the premises when it turned off the meter two months before plaintiff moved into the apartment.

(2) That it was negligence to place the meters serving this and other apartments where they were easily accessible to meddlers, trespassers, or children.

(3) That the “disk,” which defendant usually inserts in meters when it turns them off on discontinuing service, was not inserted when the meter connected with the apartment in question was cut off two months before plaintiff occupied the apartment.

(4) That it was negligence to fail to inclose such a meter in a box or compartment to protect it against malicious mischief-makers, children, or trespassers.

(5) That it was negligence to fail to inspect the meter when the previous tenants left the apartment.

(6) That defendant should have locked the cut-off valve when the gas service was discontinued before plaintiff’s entry into the apartment.

(7) That it is negligence to install several meters in the same place and alongside one another without marking each so that it may be identified with the particular apartment served through it.

Defendant avers that although it had installed the meter and had connected its main gas supply pipe to the said meter and to the other meters serving the other occupants of the building, it had not installed any of the pipes inside of the building and had no control or supervision over those pipes. It particularly avers that when plaintiff and his wife moved into the apartment the two gas outlet pipes were connected to fixtures and that plaintiff had removed these fixtures and had left the two pipes uncapped and open. Defendant denies especially that it was in any way negligent or that any of its employees were in any way at fault in the premises and, in the alternative, it pleads contributory negligence, averring that it was carelessness on. the part of plaintiff to remove the gas fixtures which, in this case, it alleges consisted of two small stoves, from the ends of the gas pipes and to leave these gas pipes open. *517 and uncapped, and it also charges that plaintiff was negligent in lighting the match which ignited the gas, when the odor of the escaped gas should have been noticed by him.

In the Twenty-Fourth judicial district court for the parish of Jefferson there was judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $7,515, of which amount $6,000 was awarded for physical injuries and suffering. From this judgment defendant has appealed.

It appears that plaintiff and his wife had occupied the apartment for about nine months, and they and other witnesses state that during that time they had not used gas. They testify that on the day on which they moved into the premises, plaintiff re.moved a small gas stove which was attached to one of the gas pipes, and that from that time until the explosion, many months later, both that pipe and the other one remained open and uncapped.

We first direct our attention to the charge that, when the meter was cut off after the former tenant had discontinued the use of gas, the customary small disk was not inserted in the gas supply pipe. This disk is a small round piece of metal about the size and shape of a half dollar, and it is shown that it is the custom of the company, when service through any particular meter is discontinued, to cut off the meter by first closing the valve which is located in the supply line between the main feed pipe and the meter and, in addition to turning off the said valve, to separate the two parts of the union or connection in the supply line immediately adjacent to the meter and to then place this disk in the union and tó rejoin the parts of the union and to then place around it a metal collar which is so arranged and closed with a key that the union cannot be opened until the key is broken and the collar removed. This collar is called a “seal.”

The employee charged with the duty of cutting off the meter testified that about two months before plaintiff moved into the apartment he (the employee) had turned off the valve and had placed the disk in the union and had then sealed the joint with the customary seal. His assistant testified that though he could not remember the placing of the disk in that particular union, he knew that it was always done and was certain that it had been done on that occasion. The first-mentioned employee was notified immediately after the explosion, and on the next morning he went to the building. He states that he at once noticed that the key to the seal had been slightly broken in such a way that the break was not noticeable to a casual observer. He testifies that with the key so broken it was possible to remove and replace the seal at will'. He further states that when he opened the union he immediately discovered that the disk had been removed and that, as a result, there was nothing except the cut-off valve to prevent gas from flowing into the meter and through, it into the apartment through the two uncapped pipes.

There can be no doubt that the gas which caused the explosion entered the apartment through these two pipes. Nor is there any doubt that it passed through the meter. Some inference that the explosion resulted from the escape of gas from a fixture in the community bathroom and that this gas seeped through the walls and openings in the apartment of plaintiff is sought to be drawn from certain evidence in the record, but on the night of the explosion the other apartment adjacent to the bathroom was used and, had there been escaping gas in the bathroom in sufficient quantities to force its way into plaintiff’s apartment, surely it would have also found its way into the other neighboring apartment.

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165 So. 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loyocano-v-louisiana-power-light-co-lactapp-1936.