80 W. Va. 731 | W. Va. | 1917
The demurrer, the overruling of which is complained of, on a question of pleading certified by the trial court, challenges the sufficiency of a declaration claiming right of recovery for failure of the defendant company, on discontinuance of the use of its gas by an occupant and owner of a house, to shut off the supply of gas to the service pipe, at the street or service valve, and to inspect its gas pipes and lines to such an extent as to discover a secret pipe wrongfully attached to the service pipe, between that valve and the meter, and carried into the house by the owner, and disconnect the same, in consequence whereof the plaintiff, a purchaser of the property, subsequently moving into the house, .supposing it to be free from gas and ignorant of the secret connection, unintentionally and innocently set it on fire and burned it together with its contents, by removal of the pipe, occasioning
The declaration proceeds on the theory of negligence. It impntes no willful or intentional wrong to the defendant. Such conduct is imputed only to the former owner, as a means of defrauding the defendant, not the plaintiff. The purpose of his installation of the secret pipe was to get the defendant’s gas into the house through this pipe, instead of through the meter, and thus avoid a claim for compensation for it, but his vendee suffered injury from it, not intended by the perpetrator of the fraudulent act.. Compensation for the injury is claimed from the defendant, on t*he ground of alleged omission of duty on its part, to exclude its gas from the secret pipe and from the premises, when the former owner moved out and discontinued the use of gas, by shutting off the supply at.the street or service valve, or by discovery of the secret pipe, in the exercise of the duty of inspection, and removal thereof. The gas was shut off at the meter valve which was between the fraudulent connection and the entry of the secret pipe into the house. If it had been shut off at the other valve, there would have been no gas in the pipe from which it escaped into the house. Absolute duty on the part of the defendant to shut off the gas at the street, is insisted upon. It is also contended that permission of the gas to remain in the service pipe on the plaintiff’s premises made that pipe, for the purposes of the case, the defendant’s pipe, and subjected it to the same duty of inspection thereof as devolved upon it in respect to the pipes it actually owned and used in the conveyance and storage of its gas.
For the proposition that the failure to shut off the gas at the street 'and exclude it from the service pipe leading to the house, or rather, to the point at which the meter valve was, amounted to negligence per se, only one case is cited that seems to sustain it, namely, Creel v. Charleston Natural Gas Co., 51 W. Va. 129, but, on a full and complete analysis of the opinion, it cannot be regarded as having actually asserted the proposition. If there asserted at all, it was merely conceded for the purposes of argument, and without any investigation or citation of authority. If the language of the opinion is to be taken literally, it is suscentible of -two or
The storing of gas by a gas company in the service pipe of a former customer, on his premises, after his discontinuance of the use of gas, cannot be deemed to be an act of negligence, merely because there is no legal right in the gas company so to store its gas; for, if lack of legal right of occupancy amounted to negligence, every person wrongfully leaving any object on the premises of another, however harmless it might be, would be guilty of negligence and might be liable for any
The duty to inspect the service pipe on the premises, in which the defendant left its gas, did not extend to provision against things the existence of which it was under no duty to foresee or suspect, nor to effort to discover the existence thereof. Nowhere is the duty of inspection more rigidly enforced, than in the law of master and servant; and, in that department of the law, it extends only to those things the master ought to have known and was under a duty to know. Hoffman v. Dickerson, 31 W. Va. 142; Johnson v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Co., 36 W. Va. 73; Humphries v. Newport News & Railroad Co., 33 W. Va. 135.
None of the authorities carry the principle beyond this point, in the application thereof to persons using and controlling electricity and gas. In Koelsch v. Philadelphia Co., 152 Pa. 355 the court-stated the rule as follows: “While no absolute standard of duty in dealing with such agencies can be prescribed, it is safe to say in general terms that every reasonable precaution suggested by experience and the known dangers of the subject ought to be taken. This would re
To be sufficient, a declaration must aver such facts as legally impose a duty upon the defendant in favor of the plaintiff, and then aver a breach of that duty. Since a latent defect in a gas company’s pipe, wrongfully made by a third person, without the knowledge of the company, is not such a one as. it is bound to look for, in the exercise-of its. duty of inspection, and the declaration neither avers that, the defect was such as could have been discovered by the inspection required by law, nor that the defendant had any knowledge of its existence or of facts sufficient to put it upon, inquiry as to the matter, or raise a suspicion of the existence of the defect, it does not set forth sufficient facts to show a duty from the defendant to the plaintiff, respecting the defect causing the injury complained of. There is no allegation of injury occasioned by an insufficient or defective pipe or valve, which might have been prevented by inspection and repair. The declaration attributes the injury solely to the-, presence of gas in the pipe wrongfully connected with the-service line. As this connection is alleged to have been un-.. der the residence it was concealed. It is further alleged that-it was made ivith “the criminal and fraudulent idea of pro-, curing gas from the gas company’s service line to a great, extent free of charge,” wherefore it must have been secret- and hidden. An open and patent one would not have effected; the purpose alleged.
The order complained of will be reversed, the demurrer-sustained and the case remanded with leave to the plaintiff to amend his declaration.
Demurrer sustained. Demanded^