Village of St. Johnsbury v. Cenedalla

194 A. 382, 109 Vt. 174, 1937 Vt. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 5, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 A. 382 (Village of St. Johnsbury v. Cenedalla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of St. Johnsbury v. Cenedalla, 194 A. 382, 109 Vt. 174, 1937 Vt. LEXIS 131 (Vt. 1937).

Opinion

Buttles, J.

The plaintiff village in this action of tort seeks to recover damages alleged to have been caused to its water mains by the defendants by negligent use of explosives while engaged in highway construction or improvement under contract with the State of Vermont on U. S. Route No. 2, so-called, leading easterly from the Village of St. Johnsbury. Trial was by court with findings and judgment for the plaintiff, on exceptions to which the defendants come to this Court.

Some of the facts not in dispute are as follows: Stiles Pond had, for many years, been the principal source of water supply for the said village. In order to improve the water system, a new main was laid in 1934 from the pond to the village, which consisted of a twenty-inch cast-iron pipe for part of the distance from the pond and a fourteen-inch east-iron pipe for the remainder of the distance. Over that portion of the route with which this ease is concerned, the new pipe was fourteen inches in diameter and was laid in the same ditch with the ten-inch main, which also extended from the pond to the village and had been in use for about forty years. Work on the new pipe line was completed and the water turned on about the middle of November, 1934, and the line functioned thereafter until the time of the explosion herein complained of. The preliminaries having been completed, work under said highway construction contract *178 was commenced at about the time the water job was completed, but the pipe line had been installed with reference to the proposed new highway, plans for which had been furnished the village authorities. A permit had been issued by the State Highway Department at the time the highway improvements were under contemplation authorizing the village to lay 3,400 feet of fourteen-inch cast-iron pipe along the southerly side of the highway adjacent to but not underneath the proposed concrete highway.

At the place where the explosion occurred, there was a knoll or rocky ledge underneath and on the northerly side of the highway, a portion of which the defendants were required to remove in order to widen and lower the grade of the highway. A short distance southerly of the highway at the ledge were the tracks of the Maine Central Railroad and a short distance southerly of the railroad was Moose River. From the ledge, both pipe lines descended easterly along the line of the highway for a short distance and then turned and went southerly under the river — the pipes under the river being 1,900 feet to 2,000 feet from the ledge. The pipes at the ledge were about twenty feet higher than the break under the river ■ hereinafter referred to. From the south bank of the river, the pipes again ascend to the pond a distance of. about.9,000 feet and to a height some 220 feet above the grade of the pipes in the river. The ledge extended easterly and westerly about seventy feet.

On the morning of December 18, 1934, the defendants had prepared and heavily loaded with dynamite about thirty-five drill holes in the easterly section of the ledge, several holes in the center section and twenty-six holes in the westerly section. These holes varied in depth from four feet to eight feet and in distance from plaintiff’s nearest line (ten-inch pipe line) from twenty-three feet to six or eight feet. At about nine o ’clock a.m. that day, all of the holes in the easterly section were simultaneously fired and about five minutes later, those in the westerly section. The resulting explosions were so great that pieces of rock requiring three men to move were hurled onto the railroad right-of-way approximately forty feet south of the southerly edge of the plaintiff’s fourteen-inch pipe. Almost immediately water commenced to gush from the ground and a considerable stream ran down the bank onto the railroad right-of-way. The *179 superintendent of water works for the village soon arrived and at once attempted to shut off! the water by closing the gates in both the ten-inch and the fourteen-inch pipes located on the north side of the river and easterly of the ledge. He was successful with respect to the ten-inch pipe but was unable to close completely the gate in the fourteen-inch pipe. He then shut off the water in both lines in the air valve chamber located near the Cary plant a considerable distance westerly from the ledge and toward the village. Some water continued to issue from the ditch and ran down the bank until 3.00 or 3.30 p.m. when the gate in the fourteen-inch pipe on the south side of the river was closed. This apparently stopped the flow of water.

Investigation disclosed that the ten-inch pipe was quite badly broken at the ledge and at'about the same place there was a longitudinal crack along the north side of the fourteen-inch pipe extending for about twelve feet. Repairs to the fourteen-inch pipe were rushed and completed on the morning of December 19. The gates on both sides of the river in the fourteen-inch pipe were opened for the purpose of turning on the water; a man being stationed in the air chamber westerly of the break for the purpose of opening that gate as soon as he should hear the water coming. There was a pressure gauge in the air chamber but at no time while the man was there did it register any pressure either of water or of air. When the gates were opened, there was a little spurt of water and an escape of air at the ledge lasting for an instant, but no water came through the pipe.

The need for water in the village being urgent, the break in the ten-inch pipe at the ledge was repaired as quickly as possible and upon completion of such repairs, that line was restored to service.

In the meantime, extensive investigation relative to the fourteen-inch line was made and on December 20 another break was discovered in that pipe under the bed of Moose River. This also was a longitudinal crack extending practically the full length of one section of pipe. The repairs to this break were naturally much more difficult and expensive than the repairs at the ledge had been and required the building of cofferdams and about two weeks of intensive work, but on completion of the job, the whole water system was found to be again in good working order.

*180 The defendants’ brief does not challenge the finding that the defendants were negligent in their blasting operations at the time and place involved, nor the finding that the plaintiff was guilty of no negligence contributing in any degree to the cause of the.damage. Neither do the defendants question the finding that they were liable for such damage as resulted from the breaks at the ledge in the ten-inch pipe and in the fourteen-inch pipe. They rely solely upon the contention that the court’s finding of causal connection between the explosion and the break in' the fourteen-inch pipe under the river and two other findings which are subsidiary to this one are not warranted by evidence. The subsidiary findings excepted to are:

That “he [Cox] was able to close the gate [on the north side of the river] in the ten-inch line completely but was not able to do so as to the gate in the fourteen-inch line, as a complete closing was apparently obstructed by some obstacle' — either a piece of stone or gravel.”
That “after he [Cox] had closed these gates, water still came out of the ditch at the knoll but in. much smaller quantities.”

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Bluebook (online)
194 A. 382, 109 Vt. 174, 1937 Vt. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-st-johnsbury-v-cenedalla-vt-1937.