People's Gas Light & Coke Co. v. Porter

102 Ill. App. 461, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 545
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 23, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 102 Ill. App. 461 (People's Gas Light & Coke Co. v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People's Gas Light & Coke Co. v. Porter, 102 Ill. App. 461, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 545 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee claims to have been injured by the inhalation of illuminating gas, which escaped by reason of the breaking of a pipe or fitting in the night time in the building occupied by him, which breaking he ascribes to the negligence of appellant. He recovered judgment against appellant for the sum of $5,000, from which judgment this appeal is.

Appellee was engaged in the drug business, and occupied certain premises in a building situated at the northeast corr ner of Woodlawn avenue and Fifty-fifth street, in the city11 of Chicago. The former is a north and south and the latter an east and west street. The part of the building occupied by him fronts on Fifty-fifth street, and is twenty-two feet in width and from eighty-four to ninety feet in depth. The front part, to the depth of sixty feet, he used as a drug store. The drug store was separated from the rear part by a partition, which was lower than the ceiling. In this rear part was appellee’s sleeping room, and it has a side door opening from Woodlawn avenue. Appellee testified, without contradiction, that about one o’clock in the morning of January 27,1900, he retired to his bed, and that the next he remembered he woke up in the Chicago Hospital at Forty-ninth street and Cottage Grove avenue.

The evidence is that a Mr. Thurston, who had a place of business near to appellee’s drug store, was aroused from sleep about three o’clock in the morning and traced the escaping gas to appellee’s d.r.ug store, and failing to arouse appellee by pounding on the side entrance to his sleeping room, he and another person broke open the front door of the drug store and the door between the drug store and the sleeping room, and on reaching appellee found him unconscions and removed him to Thurston’s place of business, whence he was removed to the hospital.

The declaration contains four counts. As we are of opinion that no recovery can be had on either of the first two counts, we will refer only to the last two. In the third count, after averring that the defendant constructed the pipes, and the duty of the defendant in the premises, it is averred “ that the defendant failed and neglected to erect and construct said gas service pipes leading into and through the building, as aforesaid, in a safe, proper, strong and secure manner, in this: that the said pipes, and the joints and couplings thereof, were so improperly constructed and united, fastened and secured, that the said pipe or pipes, and the joints and couplings thereof, broke, cracked and leaked, at a point in the said premises so occupied by the said plaintiff, as aforesaid, at or near the point where the said pipe emerged from the outer or street wall of the said premises, whereby the gas escaped and leaked from said pipes into the premises so occupied by the plaintiff,” etc. The negligence averred in the fourth count is “ that the said pipe or pipes, and the couplings and joints thereof, so constructed and erected by the said defendant, and leading into the said premises so occupied by the plaintiff, as aforesaid, were of such weak, insufficient and defective material and character, that the said pipes, at a point at or near where the same emerged from the outer wall of said building or premises, and into the premises or building so occupied by the plaintiff, as aforesaid, broke and cracked, and thereby,” etc.

To sustain the third count it was incumbent on the plaintiff to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, improper construction; and to sustain the fourth it was incumbent on him to prove by a like preponderance that the material used was insufficient and defective, and that the defendant was negligent in the premises. To sustain the declaration as to improper material and construction, the plaintiff called only two witnesses, Frank Buckle and John Campbell Morrison. Buckle testified that he had been in the gas fitting business twenty years, and that he examined the pipe in question about 6:30 o’clock in the morning of January 27th, after the accident. He testified that there was a one and one-half inch supply pipe from the main pipe in Woodlawn avenue, which entered the building about nine feet six inches north of the Fifty-fifth street building line and about nine inches above the surface of the ground; then there was a one and one-half inch by three-eighths inch by one and one-half inch T; then a piece about three feet six inches in length ran up on the wall, on top of which was a one and one-half inch elbow, with a one and one-half and one and one-fourth inch bushing attached to it; then a piece of one and one-fourth inch pipe, about nine feet six inches in length, ran across east to the house pipe. The house pipe was a two-inch pipe, and this was connected with the one and one-fourth inch pipe by a two-inch and one and one-fourth inch T. Witness describes the T as being one casting or one fitting, one end of which was two inches, to connect with the house pipe, and the other one and one-fourth inch to connect with the one and one-fourth inch pipe, and that the smaller part of the T extended toward the west, from where it joined the house pipe, toward the wall where the supply pipe came in from the street; that the smaller end was connected with the one and one-fourth inch pipe. The pipe which rises from the ground up along the wall, where the service pipe enters the building, is called the “ riser,” and the witness testified that the top of the riser leaned south about six inches; also, that the one and one-fourth inch pipe running from the house pipe to the riser, ran south about two feet from where it would be if it ran across at right angles to the house pipe. Witness testified that when he examined the pipe, at the time mentioned, a piece of the bushing which connected the one and one-fourth inch pipe with the elbow on the riser, and which was screwed into the one and one-fourth inch pipe, was broken off, and that the end of the one and one-fourth inch pipe, in which the piece of bushing was, was lying on the ground, and the other piece of the bushing was in the other end of the pipe where it connected with the house pipe. The following question was asked the witness by appellee’s attorney, and answer given:

“ Q. You may state,Mr. Witness, what, in the style of the art at that time, of steam fitting, was the best method, in general use, for the connection of a smaller pipe, when sucli a connection was to be made.

“ A. The proper way would be to put in a reduced fitting, if you wanted to make a smaller line of pipe.”

The witness further testified that by a reduced fitting he meant a one and one-half or one and one-fourth inch elbow. The question was objected to, and the objection should have been sustained. The question at issue was whether the connection used was a proper one, not whether a different one would have been better. C. & E. I. R. R. Co. v. Driscoll, 176 Ill. 330.

Witness testified that the bushing used was cast iron, and that, for ordinary gas, cast-iron bushings were ordinarily used; also, that there was no bend in the one and one-fourth inch pipe; and that it was supported only by the two-inch house pipe it went under, and by the elbow and bushing at its west end; that the gas company makes the connections between the service pipes of a building and the house pipes; also that he did not examine the elbow or the T where the one and one-fourth inch pipe connects with the house pipe, and that by turning the elbow, you can change the direction of the pipe.

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Bluebook (online)
102 Ill. App. 461, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-gas-light-coke-co-v-porter-illappct-1902.