99 A. 1067 | Conn. | 1917
The regulations of the New Haven Gas Light Company required that the defendant, as a condition precedent to obtaining a supply of gas, should sign a written application containing an agreement to be bound by the rules and regulations of the company. The defendant's name was signed by his daughter to such an application and agreement more than a year before the injury complained of, and, in the absence of any finding to the contrary, it must be assumed that the defendant either authorized or ratified the daughter's act, without which he could not have obtained a supply of gas.
One of the Gas Company's rules provides that it shall, at all reasonable times, by its authorized agents, have the right of access into premises to which gas is supplied, for the purpose of examining its gas piping and apparatus, etc. We think it is clear that the plaintiff was, at the time of the injury, acting as the agent of the Gas Company authorized to examine gas apparatus on the defendant's premises. It is true that the authority afterward appeared to have been given to him as the result of a mistake; but the mistake was made by the company in directing the plaintiff to the wrong place, and not by the plaintiff in going to a place to which he was not authorized to go. In going to the defendant's premises, he went precisely where the Gas Company told him to go, and for a purpose for which the defendant had agreed that the authorized agent of the company might come. *495
The defendant's application, under the rules of the Gas Company, gave the company's agents a right of access not merely to answer complaints by the defendant, but at all reasonable times. In this case the occasion for sending the plaintiff to the defendant's premises was a reasonable one, and so was the hour at which he was sent. It must be assumed that the Gas Company's instructions to the plaintiff were given in good faith, and that its agent who was charged with the business of acting on complaints of customers believed that the defendant's gas range was out of order. Under these circumstances the Gas Company would have failed to perform its duty if it had not sent a man to the defendant's premises within a reasonable time. We conclude that the plaintiff was upon the defendant's premises by virtue of an express license.
The defendant claims that plaintiff's denial of its defense of trespass did not lay any foundation for proof of license. On the other hand, the record does not show that the defendant objected to the proof of license; and if § 160 of the rules under the Practice Act (Practice Book, 1908, p. 250) applies to this case, as to which we express no opinion, it is evidently a rule for the benefit of the party whose pleading is denied, for the purpose of protecting him against possible surprise at the trial. Whether actually surprised or not, he may insist on the rule at the trial or waive it, and in this case it was not insisted on so far as the record shows.
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion on the other judges concurred.