Rauch v. Southern California Gas Co.

273 P. 1111, 96 Cal. App. 250
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1929
DocketDocket Nos. 3579, 3580.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 273 P. 1111 (Rauch v. Southern California Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rauch v. Southern California Gas Co., 273 P. 1111, 96 Cal. App. 250 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

JAMISON, J., pro tem.

By stipulation of the parties, the above eases were consolidated on appeal. The facts in each ease, except as to the damages, being the same.

Respondents brought these actions for damages resulting to their property from the explosion of gas, which they claim was caused by the negligence of the appellant gas company. Judgments were rendered in their favor in each of said cases, from which judgments appellant Gas Company has appealed.

On October 24, 1924, respondents Albert Rauch and Marie Rauch were the owners of a one-story frame dwelling, situated in the city of Glendale, the same being furnished and equipped for housekeeping and being known as 600 South Street. Respondents H. V. Zechiel, C. H. Zechiel, and Title Guarantee and Trust Company were beneficiaries and trustee under a deed of trust covering said dwelling. Daniel Stuart held a mortgage against said dwelling and respondent Niagara Fire Insurance Company was joined as a plaintiff by reason of having paid the loss occasioned by the burning of said premises. On the said twenty-fourth day of October, 1924, gas from the mains of appellant accumulated in and under said dwelling and in some unaccounted manner ignited and exploded, wrecking the dwelling and injuring and destroying the furniture and house furnishings therein contained.

It is contended by respondents that the explosion was caused by the negligence of appellant. Appellant was, at the time of said explosion, engaged in the business of supplying gas for heating and lighting purposes in various sections of the city of Glendale, and at said date was supplying gas to said dwelling and for that purpose appellant had installed a gas-meter under said dwelling and connected same by means of a service pipe with its main on South Street.

The ordinances of the said city of Glendale provided in substance that every corporation owning or having an interest in conduits, tunnels, etc., under the surface of a public street or alley used for supplying gas should file in the office of the city engineer a map showing the exact location of all mains and service pipes installed beneath such *253 streets or alleys and that no service pipe should be installed at a depth of less than two feet below the established grade.

Said ordinance also provided that the corporation desiring to install any pipe for any purpose in or under the surface of any public street should first obtain written permission from the street superintendent so to do, that a written application for such permit should be filed with said street superintendent, that a duplicate plat showing the proposed location of each excavation for such installation should be furnished said street superintendent, that legal authority should be shown to occupy or use said street, and that such duplicate plats shall first be approved by the city engineer.

It appears that on the said twenty-fourth day of October, 1924, defendant Huth was engaged in excavating a trench for the city along the west side of Kennelworth Avenue and for that purpose was using what is known as a mechanical excavator; that when at a point a few feet south of the intersection of Kennelworth Avenue and South Street the excavator came in contact with the service pipe leading from appellant’s main on South Street to said dwelling; that the contact did not break or fracture the service pipe, but dented and bent it. That prior to starting upon said excavation defendant Huth requested Smith, the foreman of pipe-layers of said city, to locate the mains and service pipes on said avenue and street. Smith referred him to Vertefeuille, an employee of the city. Vertefeuille called up the office of appellant and inquired about the location of the service pipes on said avenue and was informed by Hampton, the dispatcher of appellant, that he would have the information sent to him. Huth testified that thereafter Harry Walters, who was appellant’s service foreman, gave him a map or plat showing the locations of the mains on South Street, but that it did not show any service pipes, either on Kennelworth Avenue or on South Street, and he further testified that Walters told him there were no service pipes on said avenue. Walters denied giving any map or plat to Huth or telling him there were no service pipes on said avenue.

Huth also testified that the service pipe was located less than two feet below the established grade, that is to say, from eighteen to twenty inches below said grade.

The trial court, after quoting the provisions of the said ordinance, relating to the provisions thereof for obtaining *254 a permit for the installation of said service pipe and the requirements that a plat showing the exact location of the service pipe should be filed with the city engineer and that said service pipe should be installed at a distance of less than two feet below the established grade, made the following findings with reference to the negligence of the appellant:

“That South Street and Kennelworth Avenue are each and severally public streets of the City of Glendale, California, and that defendant Southern California Gas Company, unlawfully, negligently and carelessly failed to comply with the provisions of said ordinance in this that it caused said service pipe connecting the main with the premises at 600 South Street to be installed without having first filed a plat in duplicate, or otherwise, showing the proposed location thereof; that it showed no legal authority to said superintendent for the installation of said service pipe, that no plats, as therein provided, were approved by the city engineer of the City of Glendale and that said service pipe was installed at a distance of less than two feet below the service of said Kennelworth Avenue and South Street.”

The court further found that appellant failed to file with the city engineer or to keep a record, or make any notation of the exact location of the said service pipe, and that due to such negligence the defendant Huth had no notice or knowledge of the location or existence of said service pipe until after he had run into it while digging the ditch aforesaid; that, by reason of said negligence on the part of appellant, gas flowing from said service pipe collected and accumulated in and through said dwelling, and through some unknown means became ignited and exploded.

It appears from the evidence that while the excavator did not break the service pipe so as to cause any gas to escape at that point, it did bend the pipe and that the force of the impact caused a disconnection of the said pipe under or near the said dwelling, from which the gas escaped that caused the explosion.

Appellant, in its brief, filed in this ease, admits that it failed to perform the duty imposed upon it by the said ordinance requiring it to file a map or plat showing the *255 location of service pipes in the streets and alleys of the said city of Glendale.

It is a general rule of the law of negligence that a violation of a statute, or a county or municipal ordinance which directly causes injury to another, constitutes negligence as a matter of law. (19 Cal. Jur.

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Bluebook (online)
273 P. 1111, 96 Cal. App. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rauch-v-southern-california-gas-co-calctapp-1929.