Snider v. Town of Silver City

247 P.2d 178, 56 N.M. 603
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1952
Docket5399
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 247 P.2d 178 (Snider v. Town of Silver City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snider v. Town of Silver City, 247 P.2d 178, 56 N.M. 603 (N.M. 1952).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The Town of Silver City, a municipal' corporation, complains before us of a judgment rendered against it by the district court of Grant County in the sum o-f $7,640' in favor of the plaintiffs (appellees) by reason of property damage found to have been sustained by them in a gas explosion which destroyed certain auto cabins and items of personal property described in the complaint. The trial was before the court without a jury and the defendant Town feeling aggrieved by the judgment prosecutes this appeal.

On the 15th of March, 1949, the Town of Silver City had a crew of workmen engaged in digging a trench for laying a sewer line north on Canal Street within the corporate limits of the town. The line for the trench carried it some fifteen feet west of a tier of auto cabins owned and operated by plaintiffs. Gas and water lines already were located in Canal Street. In the course of the operation the power driven trenching machine being used to dig the trench, called a “drag hoe,” snagged the gas pipe line and bent it at the point of contact resulting in a break at a 45° elbow under the west foundation of the center cabin of the three involved, which had been constructed and were being operated by the plaintiffs.

In the explosion which followed the break in the gas line, the occupant of the middle or center cabin in the tier of three was killed. A suit for damages followed which was compromised in the course of trial and an agreed judgment for- $7,500 entered against the Town of Silver City, the defendant in the present action. The suit mentioned was by J. D. Merriman, as administrator of the estate of Bernal Hel-lier, deceased, . as plaintiff, against the Town of Silver City, as defendant, which appeared also as a third party plaintiff by impleading as third party defendants one of the present plaintiffs, Lillian M. Snider and the heirs of Bert M. Snider, who prior to his decease, was also plaintiff in the present cause. As in that action the Town of Silver City is the principal defendant in the present suit, the original plaintiffs being Bert M. Snider and Lillian M. Snider, his wife. In the present action, the Town of Silver City appears also as a third' party plaintiff by impleading J. D. 'Merriman, as administrator of the estate of Bernal Hellier, deceased, as a third party defendant and prays recovery over against such defendant of one-half of the damages, if any, awarded against it, just as in other action, as a third party plaintiff, it had asked recovery over against the Sniders as third party defendants of one-half the amount of any damages awarded against the town as the primary defendant. The two suits were numbered 12,194 and 12,195, respectively, on the civil docket of the district court of Grant County, the one bearing the lower docket number being the one in which an agreed judgment based on a compromise was entered.

While the crew of workmen operating the trench digging machine were working in close proximity to plaintiffs’ cabins and between 10 and 10:30 o’clock in the forenoon of the • date mentioned above the machine snagged the gas pipe line, pulling and bending it and jerking a portion thereof from the ground. Immediately thereafter the gas pressure in each of the two end cabins of the tier was noticeably reduced and the odor of escaping gas could be detected outside the cabins in the vicinity where defendant’s servants and employees were working. The occupants of two of the cabins discussed the lack of gas pressure in the cabins occupied by them in a tone of voice sufficiently loud for such employees to hear the conversation. Shortly thereafter one of defendant’s employees in the presence of other workmen struck a match and held it down near the pipe line where it was exposed by the snagging at a point nearest the cabins. Immediately a flash of fire was caused by the escaping gas. It was put out by one of the workmen throwing dirt on it. Notwithstanding the ' foregoing evidences of a leak or break in the line, nothing was done by any of the defendant’s employees to prevent the escape of gas or to locate the leak in the pipe line. Soon, thereafter, all members of the work crew left for lunch without having notified the gas company of the possible leak or break in the gas line and without having done anything to prevent the escape of gas, or to locate the exact point of leakage.

The foreman in charge of the. ditch digging crew was the gas inspector for the Town of Silver City and was present both before and after the snagging and bending of the gas pipe line by the drag hoe. At least two or three of the defendant’s agents and employees, one of whom was the gas inspector, who were present at the scene of the snagging and jerking of the 'gas pipe line had had experience with natural gas and knew of its dangerous properties. On former occasions, when an occurrence like this took place, the employees engaged on the job had made it a practice to call the gas company so that an immediate investigation could be made to determine if there were leaks and with a view of repairing any found. The highly dangerous, elusive and explosive nature of natural gas and the great care required in order to manage and control it safely were facts well known to the defendant, its agents and employees. Notwithstanding this, however, after the snagging of the gas pipe line and with knowledge that gas was escaping as shown by the flash fire mentioned, the defendant failed to notify the gas company or take any other precautions to stop the escape of gas or determine the location of the leak.

Subsequent investigation disclosed that a break had occurred in the gas line beneath the foundation' of the center cabin of the- tier of cabins through which gas was escaping and accumulating in large quantities in the two north cabins of the teir, all. without the knowledge of plaintiffs. About 12:30 o’clock, shortly after noon on March 15, 1949, the accumulated gas became ignited without the fault of plaintiff resulting in a violent explosion and fire in the tier of cabins mentioned, almost completely demolishing the two north cabins and resulting in extensive damage to the north wall of the south cabin.

The trial court awarded damages in the total sum of $7640 made up of items as follows:

Reasonable cost of replacing or

restoring the two north cabins $4500.00. Reasonable cost of restoring the

north wall of the south cabin.. 1000.00

Reasonable value of personal property destroyed, and not covered by insurance consisting of one stove at $25.00, chest of drawers at $15.00 and miscellaneous articles at $55.79......$ 95.79

Cost of rerouting and repairing plaintiffs’ gas pipeline necessitated by explosion.......— . 444.21

Loss of rental income otherwise accruing between March 15, 1949 and July 15, 1950, from cabins destroyed and resulting approximately from the explosion ........................ 1600.00

' The tier of cabins destroyed or damaged was erected on Canal Street due to a misapprehension on plaintiffs’ part as to where their property lines ended. This misapprehension seemingly was shared by defendant Town to the extent, at least, that it accepted certain taxes from plaintiffs on the cabins so located. At some time prior to the date of the explosion the defendant acquired knowledge that plaintiffs’ cabins were wholly on Canal Street, its property.

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Bluebook (online)
247 P.2d 178, 56 N.M. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snider-v-town-of-silver-city-nm-1952.