This wаs an action to recover damages for the destruction of trees growing on the boulevard in front of plaintiffs’ premises, caused by the escape of gas from defendant’s mains laid in a public street.^ No motion for a directed verdict was made by the defendant. The jury returned this special verdict: “Was the death of plaintiffs’ trees proximately caused by the negligence of the defendant gas company? Answer — No.” From the order of court denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, this appeal was taken.
The assignments of error present as the first question here to be determined whether this case is governed by the rules of negligence, or by the principle, laid down in Rylands v. Fletcher, L. R. 3 H. L. 330, that a landowner must keep in that which for purposes other than those which are natural he has brought on his own land — in that case water in a reservoir — at his peril.
(1) This doctrine of responsibility for damage to which the exercise of due care is no defense has been аpplied in this state. The original and leading case is Cahill v. Eastman,
(2) With respect to the responsibility for damage caused by the escape of gas, however, every one of the many American authorities which have been called to our attention, or which we have been able to find after a protracted search, determines the common-law liability in such a case upon the principles of negligence applicable to the custody of a dangerous instrumentality. 1 Thompson, Neg. 719. In Gas v. Andrews, 50 Oh. St. 695,
The law of negligence has also been applied to similar cases of damage caused by electricity (Denver v. Lawrence,
(3) -One of the considerations justifying the conclusion of the inapplicability of Rylands v. Fletcher to cases of escape of gas, namely, that pipes have carried gas away from the company’s own land, is not entitled to much weight, inasmuch as the ground in which they have been laid is the company’s property for that purpose. Nor is there great cogency in the second of such considerations, namely, that the gas company is a public service corporation engaged 'in furnishing an essential of modern city life, which it may be compelled to do on terms (Peckham, J., in Schmeer v. Gas,
A sounder, although allied, basis for the distinction, is to be found in express public authority. See Lord Russell, in Price v. South
This principle has, indeed, been carried so far as to regard the resulting damage as merely incidental to an authorized act. The celebrated case of Madras v. Zemindar, L. R.
So in National v. Baker [1893] 2 Ch. Div. 186, considering, inter alia, Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. United Electric Ry. Co. (C. C.)
It is evident that the ultimate justification of the inappliсability of the rule of insurance against harm to cases of damage by gas escaping from mains lies in the controlling regard of the common law, not for doctrine, but for common sense. Its paramount object is to work out substantial, not metaphysical, justice. Its just claim to distinction is to be found, not in the logical consistency of its applied theories, but in the practical wisdom with which it has adapted its rules to varying subject-matter and conditions. Finally, it is to be observed that the severity оf the rule of absolute liability in Rylands v. Fletcher is opposed to the unmistakable tendency of the law in all its allied branches to rest responsibility for damages upon legal culpability.
(4) The conclusion, thus justified by authorities and dictated by reasons valid as' a whole, is that the recovery of damages to shade trees on premises of the owner of land, caused by the escape of gas from mains on a public street, is to be determined in accordance with principlеs of negligence, and not by the doctrine of insurance against harm.
(5) It may be that it would be more difficult to distinguish this case from the principle of the decisions on the responsibility in trespass for damages of the person using a dangerous instrumentality than from that of Berger v. Minneapolis Gaslight Co., supra. There is an obvious difference between cases where the escape of gas damages premises upon which the gas company has the owner’s permission to introduce its pipes and, product, and cases where it enters upon such premises despite the owner’s will. Even in New York liability for escape of gas on the theory of trespass appears to have been recognized. Armbruster v. Auburn,
The question will not, however, be here decided. It is undoubtedly true that, under the reformed system of pleading, courts are empowered to grant the relief to which the facts in evidence entitle, despite the form of action adopted; but this case was not tried on the theory of trespass. In such case defendant’s proof might have been different. The instructions asked by plaintiff are inconsistent with it, and the assignments of error do not fairly present the suggestion here made for the first time.
The second question presented by the assignments of error concerns the legal correctness of the charge of the court given on the theory that this was not a case for the application of “res ipsa loquitur.” The main reason upon which that maxim is based, defendant, insists, is absent here because the escape of gas сannot be assigned to want of care, but is attributable to a cause which could not have been prevented by any amount of care and for which the defendant was not responsible, namely, the facts that “winters here are cold, and this winter extremely so, and that such breaks are inevitable, where the gas pipe is subject to extreme cold. The inherent tendency of suitable iron gas pipes is to break or part because of frost. No precaution can рrevent this.”
(1) In other words, if the custodian of a terribly and subtly dangerous instrumentality, with full knowledge of certain peril, voluntarily puts out of sight and underground the immediate means of death and destruction in such a manner that the creation of the conditions' of carnage and ruin is inevitable, and if harm, great or little, is in fact inflicted upon innocent persons or their property, then the law should
(2) All the essentials to the application of the maxim are here present. It is obviously no longer, if it ever was,' the law that never, except in contractual relations, is proof of the mere happening of an accident evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. 2 Thompson, Neg. 1227, which announces that summary, was in large measure the basis of the rule denying the application "of the maxim in Cosulich v. Standard,
One of the essentials to the application of the maxim is clearly present : The agency was admittedly in the exclusive management of the defendant. Its condition was peculiarly within its knowledge, and within the possibility of its knowledge only. The other essential is also here: The result was such as in the ordinary course of things -does not happen if those who have the management used proper care. Bee Scott v. London, 3 H. & C. 596. The record contains no evidence, nor will the court indulge in the violent presumption, that the ■escape of gas is usual, necessary, or inevitable, despite the exercise ■of due care. No necessity therefor exists'in nature. There is no justification for the assumption that means of prevention of escape, as by digging the trenches deeper or otherwise, do not exist and are •not reasonable and feasible. Nothing in the record concerning an unusually cold winter bears the faintest resemblance to an act of God. Reasonable care, it is elementary in such a matter, has reference to the known and varying severity of this climate. We agree with the trial court that leaks in gas pipes may and frequently do occur because ■of the action of frost. But to go further, and say that this is the ordinary course of their operation, in a legal sense, is to fly in the face •of common experience. Electricity may, and as frequently does, escape from wires, despite insulation, with resulting damage. The maxim applies to such cases. Delahunt v. United (Pa.)
(3) The decisions to which defendant refers us do not change this' ■view. In Ryder v. Kinsey,
(4) The specific authorities holding that the maxim applies to cases of proved legal damages caused by the escape of gas, while not univ-ocal or uniform in formulae, are substantially in accord on principle. The statement of the rule in 2 Shearman & R. on Neg. (5th Ed.) p. 1197, § 693: “The bare fact, however, that gas escaped from defendant’s pipe, is prima facie evidence of some neglect on its part, from which a jury is at liberty to draw the inference of want of due care in conducting the gas” — has received judicial sanction. Baudler v. People’s,
The assignments of error herе present only the question of the propriety of the charge given, and not what that charge ought to have been. The court instructed the jury as in an ordinary case of negligence not governed by the maxim. It erroneously failed to give the plaintiff the express benefit of the principle. Waller v. Ross, supra, p. 7, 110 N. W. 252, 254. Moreover it charged: “The mere fact that gas escaped from the ground at the place in question raises no presumption that the defendant is guilty of negligеnce.” This instruction, that as a matter of law no presumption of negligence arose, is clearly reversible error.
The third question presented by the assignments of error concerns the charge of the court as to the degree of care which defendant was required to exercise. The court charged repeatedly that only “ordinary care,” “ordinary and not extraordinary,” “ordinary care and no higher degree” of care, was the standard of the law. In view of а new trial, we call attention to the fact that the fallacy so often pointed out in the use of terms involving degrees of care as slight, ordinary, and great care, or in degrees of negligence as slight, ordinary, and gross negligence, does not inhere in these words, but in the ideas. It might exist quite as much in a charge that ordinary, as distinguished from slight or extraordinary, care, is all that is required. Many authorities exact that high and extraordinary care be exercised in cases like the one at bar; others, only ordinary care. The test in this state is due care, or care commensurate to the danger. In general terms, it is necessary that every reasonable precaution suggested by experience and the known danger of the escape of gas ought to be taken. Koelsch v. Philadelphia Co., 152 Pa. St. 355, 25 Atl. 522, 18 L. R. A. 759, 34 Am. St. 653; Consolidated v. Crocker,
The fourth question raised by the assignments of error concerns the charge of the court as to the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, so far as it tended tо increase or failed to stop the injury to his trees. The jury acquitted the defendant of negligence. It therefore did not reach the alleged error. In view of a new trial, however, and of the
Order reversed, and new trial granted.
