Phillips v. City of Alexandria

123 So. 510, 11 La. App. 228, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 664
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1929
DocketNo. 3552
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 123 So. 510 (Phillips v. City of Alexandria) 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
Phillips v. City of Alexandria, 123 So. 510, 11 La. App. 228, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 664 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The City of Alexandria distributes and sells natural gas for domestic and other purposes, its distributing system consisting of mains, pipes, meters, cut-offs, etc., — all owned by it. One of its mains runs along Wheelock Avenue on which one of the plaintiffs, Mrs. Mary 0. Phillips, owns a tenant house, municipal number 532, which was piped for gas and connected with the city main at the curb by a service pipe.

On January 2, 1928, a roomer in this tenant house struck a match preparatory to lighting an oil lamp, when a. gas explosion took place which wrecked the house, killed one of the inmates and seriously injured two others. Mrs. Phillips, the owner of the house, and the two inmates who were injured by the explosion, brought separate suits against the city for damages. The three cases were consolidated for the purposes of the trial. Their demands were rejected; and they have brought the eases up for review.

Mrs. Phillips had her house piped for gas originally in the latter part of 1926. This was done at her expense by a plumber of her own selection, but under a permit granted by the city. She owned all pipe and fixtures, including the service pipe from the main at the curb to the house. When the house was piped and the service pipe laid, the city was notified of the completion of the work and thereupon the plumbing was inspected and approved by the city inspector. The house was burned, or partially so, in October or November, 1927, and was immediately rebuilt under a permit issued by the city building inspector, although no permit was applied for or granted by the gas department for repairs, changes or additions to the gas plumbing, pfesumably because the house was burned only to the floor and it was found that the gas piping was left uninjured. Upon the completion of the repairs to the house, Mrs. Phillips, the owner, leased it to Mrs. Pugh, who moved in during the latter part of December. As stated, no permit was granted for repairs or additions to the gas plumbing, and the city was not notified that any had been made, and the gas department was not requested to re-inspect the plumbing after the repairs to the house had been completed. During the time the house was undergoing repairs, the gas was cut off at the-main, but it was cut off prior to the burning of the house because the tenant at that time failed to pay the gas bill.

After Mrs. Pugh moved into the house, she used wood stoves for heating and an oil stove for cooking, but later decided to install gas stoves for heating and, to that end, purchased some two or three gas heaters from a dealer named Darby, who, on January 2, 1928, the day the explosion occurred, carried them to the residence, set them up and connected them with the gas pipes. Darby was not a licensed plumber and had no permit from the City Gas Department to install gas fixtures, as required by a city ordinance, and neither he, nor anyone else, notified the gas office that such fixtures had been installed. Immediately after the stoves had been installed and connected by Darby, Mrs. Pugh’s daughter, Mrs. Brock, telephoned the city gas office and requested that gas be turned on at municipal num[230]*230ber 532, Wheelock Avenue, in the name of the tenant, Mrs. Pugh. The only reguest made was that gas be turned on. At about four o’clock, Mr. Kappel, city gas inspector, after finding that the fee for turning on the gas had been paid, went to the residence and turned it into the service pipe leading to the house through a valve or cock at the curb, which valve is under the exclusive control of the city. There is, however, another valve and cut-off on the service pipe at the point where it enters the house and is placed there for the convenience of the consumer, and is left under the control of the occupant of the house. Gas can be let into or cut off from the house through that valve by anyone, with the use of a wrench, after it has been turned on by the city through its valve cock at the curb.

When Mr. Kappel opened the valve at the curb, he went to the valve at the edge of the house and saw that it was closed, so that no gas could pass into the house, and immediately left the premises. After he left, someone — the testimony not showing who — opened the valve at the house and let the gas in, as the gas heaters were to be used. Between six and seven o’clock of the same day, Mr. Madere, while in the dining room, which adjoins the kitchen, with a door between, struck a match and a terrific gas explosion followed.

It is conceded by both sides that the gas which had accumulated in the house and which caused the explosion had escaped through an open, uncapped outlet in the kitchen, which neither Mr. Darby, who installed the heaters, nor any of the occupants of the house knew anything about. This opening had been left for the installation of a gas cookstove. Presumably, the tenant who had previously occupied the house left the opening uncapped when she moved from the premises.

These plaintiffs predicate their cause of action against the city upon the proposition that it was grossly negligent in two respects; first, that the City Gas Department had notice prior to the explosion that gas was escaping into the house and was asked to send its inspector at once, and failed to do so; and second, that if was negligence on the part of the City Inspector to turn gas into the service pipe without first ascertaining that all gas outlets in the house were closed..

It is conceded that in distributing and selling natural gas to its inhabitants, the City of Alexandria was exercising a private, corporate function, and therefore was on the same footing in law as an individual or private corporation and is liable for damages occasioned by the negligence of its agents and employees. Further, if it be true, as alleged and as counsel argue, that the city’s agents and employees were negligent in the handling of gas, there may be liability. On the other hand, if there was no negligence, there can be no liability.

Natural gas is an explosive and a highly dangerous substance, so that the city in handling it must be held to a degree of care commensurate with the danger. In view of that fact, if the employees of the city knew at the time the gas was turned into the service pipe at the curb that there was an uncapped gas opening in the house through which gas would escape, or if they became aware after it was turned on that gas was escaping into the house through such opening and made no effort to stop the flow and protect the occupants of the house, the city, we think, would be liable, even though it did not instáll the plumbing or the fixtures in the house and [231]*231did not at any time connect with the piping or disconnect therefrom any plumbing fixtures.

In order to fasten liability on the defendant, it is alleged and counsel for plaintiffs now contend, that the city had actual knowledge prior to the explosion that gas was escaping into the house in some manner unknown to the occupants, and that no effort was made to stop the flow.” But they failed to prove that. The testimony offered in support of that point is not convincing. Mrs. Pugh’s daughter, Mrs. Brock, who is one of the plaintiffs, lived about two blocks away. She visited her mother during the afternoon, after the gas was turned on and after the gas heaters were installed and connected by Darby. She says she heard a strange noise about the house which she could not account for, and that she went back to her own home and from there called the gas office by telephone and told an employee, Mrs. Pefferkorn, that she thought gas was escaping at her mother’s home and to send an inspector at once.

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Bluebook (online)
123 So. 510, 11 La. App. 228, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-city-of-alexandria-lactapp-1929.