Neal v. San Antonio Water Supply Co.

218 S.W. 35, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1322
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 1919
DocketNo. 6305.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 35 (Neal v. San Antonio Water Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neal v. San Antonio Water Supply Co., 218 S.W. 35, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1322 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

This suit was instituted by H. B. Neal, plaintiff in error, against the San Antonio Water Supply Company, defendant in error, to recover the sum of $25,000 for personal injuries sustained by his wife; also for $305, expenses incurred for physicians, nurses, drugs, etc. The suit is based upon injuries resulting from a fall, caused by a cut-off or curb cock box in the middle of the sidewalk in front of the premises at No. 251 West Theo avenue, over which she tripped and fell while walking along said sidewalk, and without any fault of hers. Said obstruction protruded eight or nine inches above the surface of the ground.

The defendant in error was engaged in supplying water to the inhabitants of the city of San Antonio, and the curb box over which petitioner fell had been installed in connection with the said water supply service between the property line and the curb line of the premises. Plaintiff alleges that the said curb box was installed for the exclusive use of the water supply company, not for the use of the consumer; that the water supply company, defendant in error, was operating under a water contract made with the city of San Antonio, giving it the exclusive control of all repairing, all installing of new water service pipes and appurtenances, and -of the replacing of existing ones between the company’s mains and the property line of consumers, including the curb cock and curb box between the mains and the property line.

The special negligence was alleged in the following particulars:

“(a) In permitting said curb cock box to be installed and maintained in the middle of the sidewalk and to protrude above the surface of the ground; and in this connection it is alleged that defendant was negligent in that its inspector allowed the said faulty installation, or said inspector was negligent if he failed to discover the defective installation, and defendant was likewise negligent in afterwards failing to discover the fact that said curb cock box had become more dangerous.by the wearing away of the surrounding surface of the earth.
“(b) That the water company was negligent in not detecting that said curb cock box was a dangerous obstruction in said sidewalk, since, as a matter of law, the duty devolved on said defendant to inspect this fixture which was placed in a public thoroughfare by the requirements of said company because it was placed for the use of said water company, primarily, if not exclusively, or at any rate for the joint use of the water company and. the consumer; and, moreover, because since 1914 the water company was given the exclusive management and control thereof as aforesaid by the contract ordinance entered into between the water company and the city.”

The defendant in error answered by exceptions and general denial.

The court peremptorily instructed a verdict in favor of the defendant in error. Plaintiff in error filed formal written objections 'to the giving of peremptory instruction, which were overruled, and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant in error on the instructed verdict of the jiiry.

Plaintiff in error filed proper objections to . the rulings of the court and properly saved exceptions, and has presented this case before this court with proper assignments and propositions raising all the questions necessary- for a decision of this case.

We adopt so much of the statement of facts set out in plaintiff’s brief as we think necessary for a disposition of the question:

From June 12, 1902, until May 30, 1914, the waterworks company operated in the city of San Antonio under a contract ordinance giving it a right to use the streets, etc.

About the year 1908, one B. E. Dittmar laid out and put on the market for one Priest the property fronting on West Theo avenue in the city of San Antonio.

Under date of May 27, 1908, B. E. Dittmar applied to the water company for a 2%-inch tap between South Plores and Lichen streets to supply a pipe running 1,379 feet on Theo avenue.

Under date of January 18, 1909, B. F. Dittmar gave Edgar Gray a permit to tap the aforesaid private pipe line.

In December, 1908, Edgar Gray built a home at 251 West Theo avenue. He later obtained a permit from the water company to tap their main and employed a firm of plumbers to install his service connections.A curb cock and curb box was installed about 36 inches from the property line, and it stuck up above the surface of the ground about two inches.

At that time (in 1909) the water company Required that a curb cock and curb box be placed in the service line between the curb and the property line. It was usually placed about six inches from the property line, but the company was not particular, so long as it was placed between the property line and the curb. The company,would not tap the main for the service pipe unless this curb cock was installed, and their “tapper” saw to it that the curb cock was installed as required by the rules of the company.

The water company continued to use the Dittmar pipe line as a part of their system, supplying water through it to customers for a profit.

The water company furnished the tap for connecting Gray’s service line to the Dittmar main, but Gray paid for the tap. The water *37 company also made the tap; that Is, installed it.

Gray never paid Dittmar, nor Priest, nor any one except the water company, for the water service from the time it was installed.

Neither Dittmer nor Priest ever did anything towards the* maintenance, repair, or upkeep of the Dittmar pipe line on West Theo avenue from the time it was installed. Dittmar saw some leaks in the West Theo avenue main, and afterwards noticed they were repaired, and neither he nor Mr. Priest had anything to do with these repairs^

The ordinance contract between the water company and the city of San Antonio of date March 30, 1914, provides (in so far as is applicable to the facts of this case) as follows:

(a) The water company agrees to furnish water at its mains: To each individual consumer or property owner in said city, who shall have and maintain in good repair suitable and durable pipe connected with said mains, and service connections from said mains or pipes to the property line of such consumer or owner, with proper and accessible curb cocks and curb boxes.

Where and when hereafter the present old service connections shall be out of repair between the second party’s mains and the property line of the consumer or owner, they shall be replaced with new service connections, and such replacements shall be done by the water company at the expense of the consumer or owner of the property, who shall pay to the water company the full cost of labor and materials necessary to lay suitable and durable service pipes, with all proper and usual fittings, including curb cock and curb box, from such mains to said property line, together with the cost of city permit and of replacing street pavements and sidewalks; and all such service connections so laid by the water company replacing old service connections shall thereafter be the property of the water company and shall be kept in repair by the water company.

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 35, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-san-antonio-water-supply-co-texapp-1919.