168 Ky. 348 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion op the Couht. by
— Reversing.
Appellee lived at 225 Shawnee- Drive, Louisville, Kentucky, on the 28th of July, 1914, and owned the- property. About five o’clock in the afternoon he, his wife and three children were leaving the house to spend the evening with his brother, when through one of the children wanting’ a drink it was found- the water had been turned off from his house, and none could he drawn from the faucets. They left their home and returned about half past ten o ’clock that evening-, when they discovered that the water from the faucet at the wash stand in the hath room on the second floor had overflowed the basin, and flooded a considerable portion of the house, damaging the walls, floors and furnishings.
Appellee instituted this action against appellant and recoveied a judgment for $694 for the damage sustained by reason of the flooding of his house, and appellant having been denied a new trial is appealing.
Appellee’s petition as amended alleges that the flooding of his house was caused by the gross negligence and carelessness of appellant in suddenly turning on and into the pipes of his home a large and tremendous volume of water of extreme velocity, in such way and manner as to forcibly cause same to run through the faucet and piping in said residence, thereby causing and permitting said water to flood the premises.
The evidence shows that the water was turned hack into the pipes supplying appellee’s house and other houses in the neighborhood within a short time after he left his home. The only evidence that can he construed to indicate that there was any negligence in the way in which the water was turned on again into these pipes by appellant is given by two ladies living in the same square with appellee, who testify that when the water was turned on upon this occasion the pipes and faucets in their homes were caused to shake and to make such an unusually loud noise as to frighten them. None of the pipes or faucets in any of these residences were broken
Counsel for appellee have not favored us with a brief; neither the pleadings nor the proof afford any reasonable explanation of how that faucet could have been tutned on'by the return of the water into the pipes when turned on by appellant, and we are unable to imagine how that could have done it. The only explanation, consistent with physical and mechanical laws with which we are familiar, that we are able to imagine, is that appellee, or some member of his family, left the faucet turned on; and that the waste pipe from the basin was obstructed in some way, which prevented the water from escaping through the waste pipe as fast as it came through the faucet, and that the overflow was caused in this way. We have been unable to discover the scintilla of evidence of negligence upon the part of appellant that would justify the court in overruling its motion for a peremptory instruction at the close of appellee’s testimony. The evidence in this case can supply the necessary scintilla only by the indulgence in the theory that the force with which appellant turned the water into the pipes opened the faucet by unscrewing it at the washstand, and that- would be to suppose a circumstance inherently impossible and absolutely at variance with well established and universally recognized physical and mechanical laws. Water may be turned into pipes with
This court in the case of L. & N. R. Co. vs. Chambers, 165 Ky., 736, after-stating the ‘‘scintilla rule’’ prevailing in this State, said:
“These rules cannot apply where the only evidence upon which srieh adverse party rests his right to suc-ceed, consists of a statement of alleged facts, inherently impossible and absolutely at variance with well established and universally recognized physical laws..!’.
If a statement of alleged facts inherently impossible and absolutely at variance with well established- and universally recognized physical laws will not supply the required scintilla of evidence, a theory inherently impossible based upon a statement of alleged facts certainly cannot supply it. '
If this case should be tried again instriiction number three should not be given, as it completely destroys the effect of instruction number four, which, correctly presented the defense of contributory negligence.
It results, therefore, that appellant’s motion for a directed verdict should- have been sustained, -and the judgment herein is reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent herewith. ‘ ....