Sibley v. Petty Realty Co.

42 So. 2d 701, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 641
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 28, 1949
DocketNo. 7382
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 701 (Sibley v. Petty Realty Co.) 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
Sibley v. Petty Realty Co., 42 So. 2d 701, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 641 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Isaac F. Sibley, for himself and on behalf of his six minor children, joined by his wife, Mildred Hudspeth Sibley, instituted this suit against the defendants, Petty Realty Company, Inc., and its president and general manager, M. A. Mangham, to recover substantial damages allegedly sustained by them, respectively as a result of gas being cut off by the defendants from the building occupied by plaintiffs as a home.

The building in question contains three rooms. It belongs to the defendant corporation whose stock is entirely, or very nearly so, owned by Mr. Mangham. Acting for the company, in the year 1941, he leased the building to Sibley for $10 per month. It is located in the Henderson Iron Works Subdivision in what is known as the Agurs Section of the City of Shreve[702]*702port. It faces north on Finn Street (formerly Fifth Street) and is parallel and very close to a protection levee.

In addition to the lot upon which said building is situated, the company, at the time this suit arose, owned dozens of other lots in the same subdivision, some of which are southerly and some are easterly from the lot on which the building involved in this controversy, is located. Thirteen of them had very modest buildings thereon which were leased to others for small rentals.

At the time the building was leased to Sibley, all or nearly all of the tenants used wood for heating and cooking. This, in part, was gathered from accumulations along Red River, while some was purchased by and hauled to the respective tenants.

In the year 1943 a well producing gas was brought in some eight hundred feet north of Mangham’s residence. The Sib-ley house is midway between the well and this residence. Mr. Mangham was authorized by the owner of this well to connect a line thereto and use gas therefrom free. He at once accepted the offer and laid a line of one-inch surface piping, to his residence. The line passed west of the Sibley house only a few feet. At first, the residence of Mangham and that of one of his tenants, (J. H. Gongre) were the only ones into which gas was introduced. Soon thereafter Sibley consulted Mangham about connecting his house with the line and he was authorized to do so. There is sharp controversy as to who did the work necessary to put the gas into Sibley’s house. He says that Mangham did so and charged him $1.50 per month for gas thereafter, while Man-gham' denies both of these allegations of fact. He says that he told Sibley that as the gas cost him nothing he would be as generous as was the owner of the well.

On April 4, 1946, the Petty Realty Company, Inc., sold to E. A. Hamner and others the lot on which the Sibley home is located, and fifteen lots additional, constituting two tiers of eight lots each, separated by Finn Street. The lots were purchased as a location for a manufacturing establishment. Thereafter, the City Council officially abandoned that part of Finn Street between the two tiers. Automatically this area reverted to the owners of the adjacent lots.

In the deed to Hamner et als. it is stipulated that the improvements on the lots “are not sold by this deed and are to be removed by the vendors at their own expense”. Sibley was asked to vacate the premises, but refused. Thereafter Man-gham judicially sought to eject him for nonpayment of rent, but failed in the effort. 'Other efforts, extra judicially, came to naught.

In October, 1946, Mr. Hamner called Mr. Mangham’s attention to- the condition of the small surface gas pipe at and about the Sibley house. From heavy vehicular traffic it was bent and otherwise so badly disfigured that it was feared it would break and allow the gas to escape with possible disastrous results. To avert this possibility, Mr. Mangham promptly began to install a two-inch line in lieu of the old one. In order to be safe from damages from vehicular traffic and to avoid passing over lots sold Hamner et als., this line was laid along the levee east of the house.

After the new line had been laid some seven days it was on or about October 20, 1946, connected with the well, the old line was disconnected and gas flowed only through the new line. This left the Sib-leys without gas, — hence this law suit.

Plaintiffs allege that the line was disconnected about the hour of 3:00 o’clock p. m1., without notice to them of the intention so to do; that the weather was cold and they were deprived of fuel for heat and cooking for five days because during that period they were unable to procure wood to burn in their wood stove; that other houses of the defendant company were connected with the new line and thereafter supplied with gas; that demand was made upon Mangham to- connect their home with the new line but he refused to do so; that since the closing of Finn Street they cannot get wood over that street which comes to a dead end at the levee beside the house; that the new line at the locus of the house was so laid that wood could not [703]*703be hauled over it; that defendants have built a fence back of the Sibley house which prevents access thereto from that direction, and that all of these conditions made it quite difficult for plaintiffs to get the wood they have used since the loss of gas.

Plaintiffs additionally allege that due to defendant’s action in not connecting their house to the new gas line, three of the children contracted bad colds and were confined to bed for two weeks; that due to her having to be up at nights attending the needs of the sick children, without heat in the house, Mrs. Sibley contracted influenza that lasted three or four months; that defendants’ said action has caused all of the petitioners extreme embarrassment, etc.; that the twelve year old daughter had to miss school and she was especially embarrassed and humiliated when making excuses for her non-attendance; that Mr. Sibley was humiliated and embarrassed in not being able to report for daily work because he had to remain at home and get wood necessary for heating and cooking.

Prior to answering, the Petty Realty Company, Inc., formally called its insurer, the -Continental Casualty Company, in warranty, under allegations appropriate to its position that there was coverage under the terms of a policy contract issued to it.

Answering the call, the insurer denies that the policy contract was intended to, nor did it, embrace liability flowing from the facts alleged upon, -in that the policy provided protection against loss “imposed upon defendant by law for damages caused by accident”, and that the facts of this case show that the damages sought to be recovered herein did not arise from an accident.

Answering, the defendants articulately deny all of the allegations of the petition. They reaffirm the allegations of the call in warranty and pray that should judgment be rendered against them, or either of them, that like judgment be rendered against said warrantor, plus the additional sum of $750 as counsel fees.

The case, on plaintiffs’ motion, was tried with a jury. Verdicts were returned against Petty Realty Company, Inc., and Mangham, as follows, viz.:

In favor of Mrs. Sibley, $500' and in favor of each of the five youngest children, $150. The demands of Mr. Sibley and the twenty-year old son were rejected. The jury found for the insurer on its defense of lack of coverage, and the demand against it was rejected.

Application of defendants for new trial was denied. Judgment in keeping with the jury’s verdicts was signed. Defendants appealed to the Supreme Court.

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Related

Petty Realty Co. v. Continental Casualty Co.
47 So. 2d 446 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 701, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sibley-v-petty-realty-co-lactapp-1949.