Panas v. New Jersey Natural Gas Co.

281 A.2d 520, 59 N.J. 255, 1971 N.J. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 5, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 281 A.2d 520 (Panas v. New Jersey Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Panas v. New Jersey Natural Gas Co., 281 A.2d 520, 59 N.J. 255, 1971 N.J. LEXIS 177 (N.J. 1971).

Opinion

Pee Ctjeiam.

Two very serious fires, occurring on August 6 and September 11, 1963, caused extensive damage to the boardwalk in Asbury Park and to the property of the proprietors of certain adjoining stores. Suits for damages were brought by the municipality and by the storekeepers against New Jersey Natural Gas Company, which owned and operated a gas pipeline installed immediately under the boardwalk. These actions were consolidated and the case was tried solely on the issue of liability.

Eollowing a trial of seven weeks, a jury verdict of no cause of action was returned as to all claims. A motion for a new trial having been denied, plaintiffs appealed to the Appellate Division which, in an unreported opinion, reversed the judgment below and remanded the matter for a new trial. This court granted defendant’s petition for certification. 57 N. J. 142 (1970).

The conceptual grounds upon which plaintiffs proceeded, although never very clearly articulated, seem to have been two. It was first claimed that defendant had been negligent in permitting gas to escape from its pipeline, that this gas then ignited and caused or substantially contributed to the conflagration which resulted in damage to plaintiffs. Secondly, and less clearly, plaintiffs contended that defendant installed its pipeline at a place where it was reasonably foreseeable that there might be fires and that these fires might very likely rupture the line, thus permitting gas to escape which would in turn ignite. Hence, it was argued, such allegedly misplaced installation was itself an act of negligence.

*258 At the time of the fires the boardwalk was relatively new. The planks or beam's of which it was constructed, in order to make them more resistant to wear, had been heavily impregnated with creosote. This substance, according to certain testimony, emits a smell somewhat similar to that of odorized natural gas and, like gas, is distinctly flammable at a certain temperature. On the ocean side of the structure, in an effort to control beach erosion, a solid bulkhead had been built between the lower side of the boardwalk and the beach. The spaces between the planks of the boardwalk itself, however, were 3/16th of an inch wide so that the space beneath, although a closely chambered area, was by no means airtight.

Defendant’s pipeline consisted of a single strand of 4 inch pipe suspended by chains from the lower side of the boardwalk. Service lines to accommodate consumers extended laterally into the various establishments. Pressure .within the pipe was %. pound per square inch.

All parties conceded that both fires —■ remarkably similar — were of unknown origin. Each was out of control very quickly, becoming a raging blaze well before any firefighting equipment could be brought to bear. Each was accompanied by billowing clouds of very dark smoke in addition to the flames.

The Appellate Division rested its conclusion that the judgment should be reversed upon alleged errors found in the judge’s charge to the jury. These will be separately examined.

Upon the issue of proximate cause the court’s charge stated that unless defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the damage there could be no recovery. Plaintiffs’ counsel took prompt exception and requested a corrective charge to the effect that defendant’s negligence need only have been a proximate cause — not necessarily the proximate cause — of the damage, in order for there to be a recovery. The judge at once recognized the validity of the *259 argument, recalled the jury, and gave the following supplemental instruction,

Now, ladies and gentlemen, it’s been brought to my attention and properly so that it’s possible that I charged you with regard to proximate cause, that the plaintiffs have the duty of proving by a preponderance of the credible proof the negligence of the defendant which was the proximate cause of any damage. It should have been a proximate cause because the plaintiffs have the burden of proving by a greater weight of the credible proof the negligence of the defendant was a proximate cause of the damages. The obligation of the plaintiff on this issue is satisfied if the plaintiff establishes that the defendant’s negligence was a proximate cause which concurred with the negligence or actions, even criminal, of somebody; a proximate cause, not the sole proximate cause.

This statement seems clearly to have corrected the error to which the charge was originally subject. Unlike Ellis v. Caprice, 96 N. J. Super. 539 (App. Div. 1967), certif. denied 50 N. J. 409 (1967), cited by the Appellate Division, and other similar cases, the jury here was not left in any doubt as to which of the two conflicting statements correctly announced the rule to be followed. The judge pointed out the error in his original charge and then stated the correct rule. The result is clearly to free the charge from what might otherwise have been error. We furthermore point out that following the corrective instruction, no further exception was taken by plaintiffs’ counsel who were apparently entirely satisfied.

The Appellate Division also ruled that the trial court’s charge on circumstantial evidence should not have been given. Again we disagree. All counsel requested a charge on circumstantial evidence, although wording their requests differently. No exception was taken by any plaintiff to the fact that the charge upon this point was given, but only to the phraseology employed by the court. We think the charge was appropriate and correctly stated the law. The principal issue was whether or not gas escaped from defendant’s pipeline and there was practically no direct *260 evidence that this in fact occurred. Plaintiffs were relying almost entirely upon circumstantial evidence to prove their case and it is hard to see how a full and adequate charge could have omitted the customary admonitions normally given to guide a jury where a party relies upon circumstantial evidence. The language employed by the court, as noted in the opinion of the Appellate Division, is largely taken from the opinions of this court in Hansen v. Eagle-Picher Lead Co., 8 N. J. 133, 141 (1951) and Long v. Landy, 35 N. J. 44, 54 (1961).

The trial judge refused to charge that defendant was not relieved of liability merely because its negligence may have combined with some other independent, intervening cause to produce the injury. While we think such a charge would have been proper, we do not deem its omission to have been error. Indeed, the judge might have felt that such a charge would be confusing. Defendant had not argued or contended that any intervening cause was responsible for the damage. The only possible intervening cause was an act, or conceivably an omission to act, on the part of someone unknown, which started the fire. It was never claimed, nor could the jury have reasonably believed, that this bore in any way upon the question of defendant’s liability.

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Bluebook (online)
281 A.2d 520, 59 N.J. 255, 1971 N.J. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panas-v-new-jersey-natural-gas-co-nj-1971.