St. Marys Gas Co. v. Brodbeck

151 N.E. 323, 114 Ohio St. 423, 114 Ohio St. (N.S.) 423, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 225, 1926 Ohio LEXIS 354
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1926
Docket19253
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 151 N.E. 323 (St. Marys Gas Co. v. Brodbeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Marys Gas Co. v. Brodbeck, 151 N.E. 323, 114 Ohio St. 423, 114 Ohio St. (N.S.) 423, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 225, 1926 Ohio LEXIS 354 (Ohio 1926).

Opinion

Marshall, C. J.

No witness gave any direct testimony bearing upon the cause of-the explosion. Several opinions were expressed by persons having no expert knowledge, and whose opinions could nbt aid the jury, because the jury could reason as well as they. Upon the issue of contributory negligence the only testimony is that of the witness Heusch, who testified that, as he was leading Mc-Evoy into the house, after the accident, the following conversation took place:

“Joe, how did this happen? ‘Well,’ he.says, ‘I got down—I went in and got down on the third step—and lit a match;’ and he says, ‘That is all I knoyr of it.’ ”

Manifestly, lighting a match in a cellar, without any evidence of the fumes of gas and without any other evidence indicating a peril from producing a flame in the cellar, would have no probative effect in raising the inference of contributory negligence, unless it also be inferred from the mere fact of explosion that there must have been gas and that McEvoy must have detected the odor before striking the match. Even so, it would have been a *427 matter to be submitted to the jury under proper instructions, and no court should declare as a matter of law that a recovery was defeated on the ground that plaintiff’s testimony raised a presumption of contributory negligence. The case must be disposed of upon the issue of the defendant’s negligence.

The direct testimony on this issue is that there was an explosion of tremendous violence, which blew McEvoy out of the cellar, and which blew out the doors and windows, and lifted the roof, and bulged out the sides of the building. There is no positive evidence as to the character of the gas which caused the explosion. It is possible that it might have been either natural gas, or sewer gas, or gasoline fumes. Three or four days, possibly a week, before the explosion, a noise was heard in the cellar which was believed to indicate an escape of gas. A plumber was called who had no connection with the gas company, and upon inspection found all gas pipes in good condition and no gas escaping, and found that the noise was caused by leaky water pipes, which he repaired. The meter reader had read the meter for the month of September, and detected no odor of escaping gas, and therefore made no careful inspection of the condition of the pipes. Assuming that the plumber who was called at a later date made a careful inspection, it may be considered as proven that there was no defect in the gas pipes or meter and no escaping gas a few days before the explosion. When the meter reader returned on October 19, to again read the meter, the trapdoor leading to the cellar was covered with rubbish, *428 and McEvoy asked the meter reader to return a little later, and said that he would clear the door in the meantime. It was during this short absence of the meter reader that McEvoy entered the cellar with the lighted match causing the explosion. All of the meter reading was done by Mr. Vogel, the superintendent of the gas company at St. Marys.

Mr. Vogel was called by the plaintiff for cross-examination under Section 11497, General Code, relative to certain matters pertaining to the explosion and occurrences which followed the same. Assuming that he was an officer within the meaning of that section, the plaintiff was not concluded by his answers, but that section can afford no comfort to plaintiff, because there was no effort to introduce any evidence to contradict his testimony. Vogel testified that he found no evidence of leaking gas when he read the meter in September, and that he did not read the meter in October, for the reason already stated. He further testified that immediately after the accident, within a half hour or three-quarters of an hour thereafter, he went to the cellar in company with a Mr. Jones and a Mr. Caldwell and made a test of the meter and pipes, and found no evidence of escaping gas. Later he went to the basement in company with one Malone, superintendent of the Lima Natural Gas Company, and one Mr. Brady, and made further tests by means of lighted matches, and then took off the meter and made more elaborate pressure tests to ascertain whether there was any leak in the pipes, and says that no evidence of leakage was found. He also testified that the meter was taken out and never returned, and that, when the *429 company a day or two later again began to supply gas, a new meter was installed. It is claimed by plaintiff below that these facts justify the inference that the meter was defective and was the cause of the alleged leakage and the resultant injuries. It is further insisted, under the rule which prevails in Ohio, that the matter should have been submitted to a jury under instruction's that they might base a reasonable inference of negligence upon the removal of the meter under such circumstances.

This view, if maintainable, is under the well-known scintilla rule established in Ohio, and which must be applied and respected by courts, regardless of their bélief in the soundness of the rule. There are several considerations which militate against the application of the rule to the record in the instant case. Negligence is never presumed from the mere fact of an accident and resulting injury. The burden is upon the plaintiff to prove negligence on the part of the defendant as the direct and proximate cause of the injury. The law presumes that persons upon whom the duty of exercising care is thrown do in fact exercise such care, and while the burden of proof is upon the one alleging lack of care, that negligence may be shown either by evidence direct in its nature or by proof of circumstances from which a reasonable inference of want of care may be drawn. It must be borne in mind in the instant case that there is no direct evidence that the meter was defective or that it permitted an escape of natural gas. It is shown that the meter belonged to the company, and it owed the duty of providing a meter of standard kind and character and in ser *430 viceable condition. The witness Vogel has testified that this particular meter was in good condition at the time he made the inspection a month before the accident, and that it was in good condition, as shown by the ordinary tests, immediately after the accident, and by more elaborate tests a few hours later. It appeárs from the record that both tests were made in the presence of other persons whose names were disclosed during the trial.

All of the direct evidence in the case, if believed, clearly proves that, not only the meter, but the pipes, were in sound and safe condition. It is true, under the statute above referred to, that the plaintiff was not bound by this testimony, and that he might have introduced other evidence to rebut it. Not having done so, and there being no evidence even tending to rebut it, except possible inferences to be drawn from the accident, the testimony of Vogel must be accepted as competent substantive testimony, having probative value. It has not been shown that the meter was destroyed or placed beyond the processes of the court; neither is it shown that the other persons who helped to make the test were not available at the trial. It is apparent, therefore, that the record, not only admits of no inference of negligence, but even contains direct evidence of the good condition of the meter and the pipes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 323, 114 Ohio St. 423, 114 Ohio St. (N.S.) 423, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 225, 1926 Ohio LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-marys-gas-co-v-brodbeck-ohio-1926.