Sullivan v. Natural Gas Co.

154 So. 387, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 669
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1934
DocketNo. 4800.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 So. 387 (Sullivan v. Natural Gas 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
Sullivan v. Natural Gas Co., 154 So. 387, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 669 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, lessee of a filling station at the intersection of Sterlington highway with De Siard street, in the eastern part of the city of Monroe, brings this action against defendant to recover damages for the alleged illegal and malicious cutting off of the supply of gas to the station and to her frame .residence connected thereto. She alleges that the gas was cut off purely and simply because she would not pay a bill due by her son-in-law, B. G. Cole, for gas consumed by him and family in a residence in the southern part of the city of Monroe, for which bill she was in no wise responsible.

Defendant, while admitting that it did discontinue gas service to plaintiff from about mid-evening November 8th to 5 o’clock the afternoon of November 9, 1932, denies that its action in so doing was malicious or not warranted in law and under its contractual relations with plaintiff. It affirmatively alleged that, when the gas supply was cut off, plaintiff’s son-in-law owed it no amount, and that such action was taken against plaintiff because she had knowingly violated the terms of her contract with defendant, incorporated in and a part of her application for gas service, had violated its rules and regulations relative to receiving and consuming gas, and had violated the ordinances of the city of Monroe relative to the character of and the method of installing pipes, meters, etc., in buildings previous to use of gas therein. The details of plaintiff’s and defendant’s positions, contentions, and defenses will be discussed as we progress in this opinion, The testimonial proof is replete with contradictions ; and much of it is irreconcilable. The lower court did not undertake to reconcile it, but rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff, on the legal proposition that defendant’s rules and regulations, in so far as they ascribed to it the power of determining when and whether a gas customer has complied with the laws of the city, were unreasonable, unjust, oppressive, and therefore ineffective as against plaintiff’s right to recover in this suit. Plaintiff was given judgment for $300, and defendant appealed. In this court, by answer to the appeal, plaintiff prays that the judgment \ie increased to the full amount of her demand.

The uneontroverted facts, and facts found by us to have been established, are these:

The filling station, consisting of an open front, where cars are serviced, and three inclosed rooms, adjacent to the front portion, was erected and piped for gas prior to 1928, when the suburban section, wherein it is located, was incorporated into the city limits A certificate of inspection issued to the owner of the station approving the gas equipment therein, evidently after 1928; gas was supplied to and consumed by the occupants of the station. The meter was removed when the station was given up by them, as it was not therein when plaintiff occupied it in June, 1931. There is a small room in the northeast corner of the station wherein was located the gas meter, the electric meter, and the air compressor. It is referred to by the witnesses as the “compressor” room, and we’ shall so refer to it herein. There was a small frame one-room building a few feet north of the station used for sleeping quarters, which was supplied with gas by a line from the compressor room. This building, in the fall of 1931, was removed by plaintiff and relocated a short distance east of the station, to which was added a wing of three rooms, extending westerly a few feet beyond the east wall of the station building and a lesser distance from its northern wall. This limited space between the walls of the two buildings was closed at each end so as to provide a continuous and inclosed passageway from the compressor room unto the new frame building. The eaves of the roof of the two buildings for a few feet drain into a common gutter. In removing the small building to the new location, necessarily the gas line to it was disturbed and disconnected. The gas, itself was cut off by manipulation of a valve in or about the pipes of the meter loop. This was done by plaintiff’s employees, and was in *389 violation of a law of the city. When the new frame building was completed, plaintiff’s son-in-law piped three of the rooms for gas with half-inch pipe. This was also in violation of the city’s law, which required that such pipe be not less than one inch in diameter. The-new piping was connected with the house line in the compressor room, and, after a meter was hung in the loop therein, on plaintiff’s application on November 27, 1931, gas was turned on by defendant. This meter was furnished and hung by defendant free of cost to plaintiff. No certificate of inspection from the city as to the adequacy of the piping, etc., of the frame building was required by defendant prior to hanging of the meter. Plaintiff regularly paid for all gas consumed in the two buildings, which was registered by the one meter in the station. No criticism or complaint was made about anything plaintiff had or had not done in connection with the piping of her new building for gas or attaching same to the line in the compressor room.

In the latter part of September, 1932, plaintiff’s son-in-law, with his wife and small child, who had prior thereto resided .in the southern section of Monroe, moved into and established living quarters in plaintiff’s home at the filling station. She required that they pay for gas consumed in the two rooms allotted to them. To know the amount of gas, it was necessary that another meter be hung on the premises. When Mr. Cole, plaintiff’s son-in-law, abandoned his residence in southern Monroe, he surrendered the meter he had been using there to defendant with instructions to hold until further advised. At that time he was in arrears for gas to the amount of ?2.20, but had a $5 deposit on meter in the company’s hands. Such deposits are not applicable to payments of gas bills so long as the user’s account is alive; that is to say, as long as he is using the meter, or has not definitely surrendered it without condition.

On October 5th, Mr. Cole applied to defendant to transfer and hang in plaintiff’s residence the meter he had formerly used, so as to comply with her wishes about paying for the gas. No objections were made to this request and the usual formal note made thereof by defendant’s office man.

The laws of the city of Monroe in force at that time required: (1) That meter loops be so located that they be easily accessible and protected from the weather, and that, as in plaintiff’s case, the loop be located back of lattice line with opening so that meter may be read from the outside; (2) all gas piping attached to house line be tested and inspected in the manner and by the formula prescribed by such law, and that meter will be set and gas turned on by authorized representatives of the company only after such test and inspection shall have been made'; (3) the house line from the meter must be not less than one inch in diameter for houses of five rooms or less, and one and one-fourth in dh ameter for buildings of six to seven rooms; (4) that under no conditions shall plumbers, fitters, or other parties disconnect any meter, connect to or disturb piping on the inlet side of the meter after once set; and (5) finally, that “all gas companies operating in the City of Monroe are hereby directed to refuse to supply any consumer unless application is accompanied by the Inspector’s Certificate of Inspection.”

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 387, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-natural-gas-co-lactapp-1934.