Soulier v. Fall River Gas Works Co.

112 N.E. 627, 224 Mass. 53, 1916 Mass. LEXIS 1066
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 112 N.E. 627 (Soulier v. Fall River Gas Works Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soulier v. Fall River Gas Works Co., 112 N.E. 627, 224 Mass. 53, 1916 Mass. LEXIS 1066 (Mass. 1916).

Opinion

Lorustg, J.

On moving into a house which had been unoccupied for six months, the plaintiff sent to the defendant gas company “to put in a gas meter.” This was in the week before the seventeenth of June, which in the year in question fell on a Tuesday. On some day in the middle of that week, two employees of the gas company came to the house to put up the meter. After putting up the meter, which was in the cellar, they came into the plaintiff’s kitchen and tried unsuccessfully to light the gas there. They found that no gas was coming through the pipe and, without returning to the cellar, they left, saying that they would have to send the “drip-man.” On Saturday of the same week another person came from the gas company, went down cellar and from there went up into the kitchen. He tried to light the gas and found it would not light and said he would have to send the drip-man and left. On the following Tuesday, the- seventeenth of June, one Laroche (“the drip-man”) came to the house. He pumped the “drip out” in the yard, then he went into the cellar through a door leading directly into it from the yard and then came into the kitchen. On coming into the kitchen he struck a match and lit the gas, whereupon the plaintiff said to him that she smelt “gas awful strong” to which he answered “You smell the gas from my hands. It comes from my hands and clothes, I am full of it,” to which the plaintiff replied “You sure it’s all right, everything is all right, you sure?” and he said “Everything is all right.” At the time that Laroche came to the plaintiff’s house she was getting dinner for her children who had come home early because it was “circus day.” She gave the children their dinner on a plate and they took it out in the yard because of the smell of gas in the house. After taking a pitcher of water to the children in the yard the plaintiff came back into the house [55]*55to take "the pot off the stove” and put it in the pantry. She took the pot into the pantry, took some potatoes out of the pot and put them in a dish. She testified that after that: “I don’t remember any more. When I next remembered I was out in the yard sitting.” The true explanation of the escape of the gas was found out after the accident. After the accident it was found that the tenant who had moved out six months before the plaintiff took the house had a gas stove. On moving out the tenant unscrewed this stove from the gas pipe, laid a piece of wood over the end of the open gas pipe and left the house with the pipe unplugged. No gas came out of the unplugged pipe until the drip was pumped out because the water in the drip prevented the gas coming into the house; but when the drip was pumped out by Laroche the gas came through the drip into the house and escaped through this unplugged pipe.

There was some conflict in the evidence, but the jury were warranted in finding that these were the facts of the case.

At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant asked the presiding judge to give the five rulings

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Related

Brennan v. Arlington Gas Light Co.
171 N.E.2d 838 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1961)
Webster v. Kansas Power & Light Co.
323 P.2d 643 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1958)
Wainscott v. Carlson Construction Co.
295 P.2d 649 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1956)
d'Entremont v. Boston Consolidated Gas Co.
70 N.E.2d 700 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1947)
Barbeau v. Buzzards Bay Gas Co.
31 N.E.2d 522 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1941)
Gebby v. Carrillo
177 P. 894 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.E. 627, 224 Mass. 53, 1916 Mass. LEXIS 1066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soulier-v-fall-river-gas-works-co-mass-1916.