Willmar Gas Co. Inc. v. Duininck

53 N.W.2d 225, 236 Minn. 499, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 683
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 9, 1952
Docket35,728
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 N.W.2d 225 (Willmar Gas Co. Inc. v. Duininck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willmar Gas Co. Inc. v. Duininck, 53 N.W.2d 225, 236 Minn. 499, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 683 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

Christianson, Justice.

This is an action for damages sustained by plaintiff as the result of a break in one of its service pipes allegedly caused by defendants’ *500 negligence. After the jury had returned a verdict, for plaintiff, defendants made an alternative motion for judgment or a new trial. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and plaintiff appeals from that order.

Plaintiff, a Minnesota corporation, maintains a gas distribution system in the city of Willmar. In 1930, an east-west gas main, which had originally been installed on Benson avenue from Sixth street west to Second street west, was extended 175 to 180 feet east on the south side of Benson avenue. About the same time, a %-inch north-south service pipe was connected to that main. It extended 7iy2 feet north of the main and then turned east for 5y2 feet into a building housing a produce company. The service pipe was not in use in 1918 and so did not carry gas into the produce company building, though it held gas from the main.

Defendants are copartners engaged in the general contracting business. During the summer of 1918, they had a contract with the city of Willmar for the grading of certain streets in that city, including Benson avenue. On July 31, 1918, two of defendants’ employes, Albert Becker and LeRoy Kaiser, began finishing operations on Benson avenue and spent most or all of the day on the block between First and Second streets west. The purpose of this work was to finish and smooth off the rough subgrading previously done by a subcontractor employed by defendants. Becker and Kaiser each operated a power patrol or blader equipped with a 11-foot blade behind the two front wheels. The large blades were used to produce a smooth surface by leveling the ridges and loose dirt left by the grading machines. Only Becker and Kaiser worked on the street that day. There was no one supervising their work, but both men denied cutting below the existing subgrade. The record discloses that during the original grading operations the subcontractor twice broke gas pipes, but notified plaintiff immediately in each instance. There was no evidence of any machines working on the street other than those owned or employed by defendants.

Becker testified that he pulled up a piece of pipe in a driveway a short distance east of First street off Benson avenue. He was *501 headed north in the driveway, which was on the east side of a viaduct that crossed Benson avenue at First street. The pipe Becker pulled up was iy2 or 5 feet long. It was old, filled with dirt; and appeared to he unattached to any other pipe. Becker denied pulling up any other pipe. Kaiser stated that he struck no pipe on Benson avenue. Neither man remembered smelling any gas during the work.

August Nelson, called on behalf of plaintiff, worked during the summer of 1948 for a lumber company located on the north side of Benson avenue between First and Second streets and about six feet west of the produce company building. Though he could not recall the exact date, he recalled seeing machines leveling off Benson avenue between Second and First after some grading had been completed earlier. Nelson testified that a grader which he saw doing this work hit and pulled up a pipe about 50 feet from where he stood in the lumberyard. He saw 6 or 8 feet of pipe being lifted up. The spot at which he saw the pipe being pulled up in the street was located about 6 feet east of a place where he later observed a bubbling up in a pool of water located about even with the east line of the lumberyard shed.

In September 1948, plaintiff noticed that there was a sharp increase during the month of August in its losses due to unaccounted-for gas. The latter term is the name given to the difference between the gas charged to plaintiff’s customers and the gas purchased from plaintiff’s supplier. A certain amount of loss is to be expected. Prior to August 1948, plaintiff’s unaccounted-for gas averaged 3.99 percent per month. In August 1948, such unaccounted-for gas amounted to 25.5 percent of all gas purchased. On June 14, 1949, a leak was found in the service line on Benson avenue between Second and First streets, and that leak was capped. There was an immediate drop in the unaccounted-for gas loss. Between August 1948 and June 1949, plaintiff’s unaccounted-for gas had averaged about 19 percent per month. After June 1949, plaintiff’s loss averaged about 6.3 percent per month.

• After the sharp jump in gas losses was discovered, plaintiff began an examination of its system to determine the cause. It was de *502 termined that a break or breaks in the system were the probable cause of the losses, so that the examination of the system became a search for leaks. That search ended with the discovery of the break in the service pipe on Benson between Second and First streets. The service pipe was connected to the east-west main on the south side of Benson. The north-south service pipe had been severed at a point near the south curb of Benson and extending up to the north curb. A piece of the service pipe about 18 feet long was missing, and it has never been found.

Richard W. Stafford, a consulting gas engineer, was called by plaintiff. He had been hired by plaintiff in June 1949 to aid in the search for the leak that was the suspected cause of the heavy gas losses plaintiff suffered. One of his tests was to study the characteristics of the gas load between midnight and 4 a. m. Normally, there would be small consumer consumption during those hours, and so the gas pressure would be high. A large flow of gas, indicated by low pressure during those hours, would indicate that there was a large leak or leaks. The flow is determined by a Bristol recording-machine meter in plaintiff’s main office which measures the pressure between the’ plant and the distribution system at that point. This portion of the distribution system encompassed the downtown system, which included the block between Second and First on Benson avenue. The pressure at the plant was maintained at five pounds at all times. Stafford pointed out that prior to July 31, 1948, between midnight and 4 a. m., the meter indicated a steady pressure of five pounds at the main office, the same as the pressure at the plant. On July 31, 1948, the meter indicated a steady pressure of only iy2 pounds at the main office during the critical period. The 4%-pound pressure continued during the observed hours until June 14, 1949, when the pressure during the crucial hours rose to five pounds and remained at that point until lowered by the company at Stafford’s suggestion. It had been earlier established that a leak such as the one found on Benson avenue would be reflected on the Bristol recording chart.

*503 Stafford estimated a loss of an average of 1,115,000 cubic feet of gas per month, from the Benson avenue leak. He checked this approximation of the size of the Benson avenue leak by determining whether the estimated volume of lost gas could cause the pressure drop actually found. His calculations were made by estimating the pressure drop to be expected from the estimated volume of gas lost after considering the normal pressure drop to be found as the gas passed through the different dimensions of pipe.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W.2d 225, 236 Minn. 499, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willmar-gas-co-inc-v-duininck-minn-1952.