Starcher v. South Penn Oil Co.

95 S.E. 28, 81 W. Va. 587, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 20
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 95 S.E. 28 (Starcher v. South Penn Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starcher v. South Penn Oil Co., 95 S.E. 28, 81 W. Va. 587, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 20 (W. Va. 1918).

Opinion

Ritz, Judge :

In a suit by the plaintiff as administrator of the estate of Oliver Norman, deceased, to recover from the defendants South Penn Oil Company and United Fuel Gas Company damages for the death of his decedent caused by the alleged negligence of the defendants, a verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of the plaintiff, from which this writ of error is prosecuted.

It appears that there was a road running up what is called Big Run. This was not a public highway as is shown by the record, but it was a way that had been used for many years by a considerable number of people living up this run, and also by people living on the other side of the ridge. It was likewise used by the mail carriers in the performance of their duties, and it seems clear from the evidence that for many years it had been used by all who had occasion to do so without objection on the part of the owners of the property through which the same ran. The defendant South Penn Oil. Company was' operating for oil in this territory. The defendant United Fuel Gas Company had a gas well in the same territory, and the defendant Oil Company was procuring gas from this well to be used in its operations for oil.' In [591]*591order to convey the gas from the well to the' place where it was needed the defendant oil company constructed a two-inch pipe line running down Big Run, across the same, and extending to the point at which it was operating. At the point where this pipe line crossed Big Run the road above referred to ran in the bed of the creek, so that when the pipe line crossed the creek it also crossed the road. In addition to the uses which were made of this pipe line by the South Penn Oil Company, the defendant United Fuel Gas Company. also furnished gas through it to a number of its patrons situate along the line. This pipe line was laid on the surface of the ground, and at the place where it crossed the road running up the creek aforesaid, it appears that the bed of the creek was some two or three feet below the surface of the ground. The pipe line was not laid straight across the creek, but was conducted down the side of the bank, across the bed of the creek upon the bottom thereof, and up the bank on the other side to the natural surface of the ground, so as not to block the roadway running up the creek. It is shown that the pressure of gas in this line was ordinarily about four hundred pounds to the square inch. At the point where this pipe line crossed the creek people having occasion to use the road passed over the pipe line. It further appears that the defendant South Penn Oil Company obtained from the owners of the land a grant of the right of way for this pipe line, and that it also obtained from the owners of the land a grant of the right of way for a road up the creek, being the right to use the road above referred to. On the day of Norman’s injury the Hope Natural Gas Company procured from the defendant South Penn Oil Company an appliance to be used by it in its operations, in another county, and employed Norman to remove this appliance from the point where it then was to the place where it intended to use it. In order to effect this removal it was necessary for the plaintiff’s decedent to go up this road in the creek for the purpose of procuring the appliance and bring it down the creek to the main road or highway. For this purpose he took two yoke of oxen belonging to him, and it is shown that just before the accident which resulted in his death he was proceeding up the-creek [592]*592a very short distance from where the pipe line crossed it, with the oxen in front of him and a chain dragging behind them on the ground. Shortly thereafter witnesses who saw the plaintiff’s decedent going up the creek as above stated, heard a loud report as from an explosion, and saw dust thrown up near the point where he had last been seen. On going to this point they found that one of the connections of this pipe line at the point where it crossed the creek had broken, and that plaintiff’s decedent had been knocked down from some cquse and was lying unconscious near this crossing. The oxen were proceeding on up the road having crossed the pipe line. This pipe line crossed the creek practically at a right angle to the line coming down the run. After this explosion it was found that the part which extended across the creek at a right angle to the line with which it connected on the bank had been straightened out so that the disconnected ends of the line were at a distance of about eight to ten feet from each other. The theory of the plaintiff is that when his decedent was crossing this pipe line, because the same was insufficient to withstand the pressure of the gas therrein it was broken loose at the connection on one side of the creek, and when the line became so disconnected the pressure of the gas straightened it out, and in doing so the pipe hit the plaintiff in the back knocking him unconscious, and inflicting a wound from which he subsequently died. The defendants’ theory is that a hook on the chain which was fastened to the cattle being driven by the plaintiff’s decedent caught on this pipe and that it was pulled apart in that way. After plaintiff’s decedent, regained consciousness he was carried to a nearby residence and a doctor immediately called. An examination by the doctor disclosed a wound on the back of the injured man about fifteen inches long, the bruise extending to and crushing and dislocating two of the vertebrae. The plaintiff’s decedent died in a very short time as a result of this wound. The plaintiff in this suit claims that the defendants were negligent in maintaining this pipe line across this road in the condition that it then was, that is, lying upon the surface of the ground exposed to contact from wagons or other things passing over it. It is also contended that the [593]*593pipe line was negligently constructed out of old and insufficient material, and that the defendant did not use reasonable care in maintaining the same after it was constructed.

- Upon the trial of the case, after the plaintiff had concluded his testimony, the defendants asked leave to file a plea denying that plaintiff was the administrator of Oliver Norman. Accompanying this plea affidavits were filed showing that the matter set up in the plea had just been discovered. This plea alleged that the plaintiff was appointed as administrator of the estate of Oliver Norman, deceased, at a point about nineteen miles from the courthouse; that the clerk of the county court, at the request of the widow of Oliver Norman, went to this point and there met the parties interested, appointed the plaintiff administrator, took his bond, administered the oath to him, and appointed appraisers of the estate. He then sent the papers to his office at the county seat and they were entered upon the record by his deputy as though the appointment had been made in the office. It is alleged that because of this fact there was no appointment of the plaintiff as administrator, and that he cannot for that reason maintain this suit. The circuit court refused to allow this plea to be filed but permitted the defendants to introduce their evidence under it, upon the theory that, it was a matter provable under the issue of not guilty. The facts as above stated in the plea were proved by witnesses. It was also shown that after this appointment was made as aforesaid, the county court at a regular session confirmed the same. Can this appointment of the plaintiff as administrator be attacked collaterally as is sought to be done in this case ? General jurisdicition over the appointment and qualification of personal representatives is by the Constitution (Art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 S.E. 28, 81 W. Va. 587, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starcher-v-south-penn-oil-co-wva-1918.