1. Inflammable gas, when coming in contact with fire, after having been liberated from pipes in which it is usually confined, is a highly dangerous substance, and a duty rests upon one having it under control to exercise due care to prevent its escape where it might become ignited and explode and cause injury and damage. Chisholm v. Atlanta, Gas-Light Co., 57 Ga. 29; 28 C. J. 589, 591; Christo v. Macon Gas Co., 18 Ga. App. 454 (
2. Since the explosion of the gas by coming into contact with fire after its escape into the house could reasonably be foreseen, an explosion of the gas which injures a person in the house1, although the explosion is caused by the act of another in striking a match in the house and setting fire to the escaping gas, may, notwithstanding the latter act, be the proximate cause of the injuries. Southern Railway Co. v. Webb, 116 Ga. 152 (
3. Whether a woman injured by the explosion of gas as indicated above wa.s a trespasser on the premises upon which the explosion occurred and went there from a neighboring apartment in the same building for the purpose of detecting the source of escaping gas, she was not a trespasser as respects any right of the gas company; and the company can not, upon the ground that she was a trespasser on the premises, avoid any liability to her for the injuries sustained as a result of an explosion of the gas, where the explosion and the injuries sustained by her were
4 The petition set out a cause of action, and was good as against general demurrer. Judgment reversed.
