5 Daly 144 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1874
The main, though not the proximate cause of the accident, was the escape of gas into the cellar, in consequence of the breaking of the main pipe in the street, and there was sufficient in the evidence to submit the question to the jury whether the breaking of the pipe was owing to the
It was shown by the defendant’s evidence that the general rule of the gas company is to lay their main pipes (to protect them from the frost) three and a half feet below the surface of the street. The pipe, according to the return in the company’s books, in this particular instance was laid but two feet ten indhes from the surface, and, according to Mr. Schermerhorn’s evidence, who took the actual measurement, it was but two feet and seven and three-eighths inches, and there was nothing to show that it could not have been laid deeper; nor could the president of the company give any reason why it was not put down to the customary depth. With the fact that the average
Mr. Webster testified that he supposed that the cause of the fracture was frost. He said, “ I should suppose, from the examination that I made, that the street had been originally filled in, and the freezing had lifted the pipe from the broken rocks and broke it in letting it down.” This was his opinion as an expert, and it was strongly corroborated by the testimony; for it was shown by the defendant’s witnesses that the earth below the pipe was soft and loose; that there was a weight of heavy stones immediately over the pipe, that came very near the surface, there being above them but three inches of sand and the paving stones; that the break was in the middle of the pipe; that the earth was softu just where the break ” occurred, and that one of the large stones lay in the crack on the top of the pipe, showing that it was not only possible, but highly probable that the accident occurred exactly in the way suggested by Mr. Webster.
Some stress is laid upon the circumstance that the loose and soft earth beneath the pipe was where the sewer connection was made with the house, or, as the defendant’s workman expressed it, that the sewer connection came into the cellar about the place where the break was, the break being directly over the sewer connection, and that the ground there was loose and had not been packed. This evidence was given upon the assumption that the sewer connection was made after the gas pipe was laid; but this was not shown and cannot be assryrned to have been the fact. This evidence, moreover, was entirely for the consideration of the jury, for these witnesses were contradicted upon a very material point, whether the ground was
The main gas pipe was laid in 52d street in 1868, and the-foreman of the defendant, who laid it, was examined. He-testified that he never piled stones on the top of any of the pipes; that he generally put dirt next to the pipe when he had it, and then stone ; and that he laid the main in this instance in the same way ; that he laid the pipe, but was not in the defendant’s service, when the street was dug up.
One of the workmen above referred to testified that the ground was frozen “ pretty near down to the pipe,” but that around the pipe it was not frozen, and the ground was soft. The other was asked if it was frozen down as far as the gas pipe, and he answered that there was an inch and a half or two inches of soft ground, and that the ground around the pipe-was loose and soft. Now Mr. Schermerhorn testified that he. saw the ground and the condition of the stone around the pipe after these workmen had dug down to it, and that the pipe was resting on stones, which was a direct contradiction of the statement of these witnesses. It was for the jury therefore to-determine whether his or their statement was the more reliable
The remaining question is, whether there was co-operating negligence on the part of the plaintiff. I think it very questionable whether a case of negligence was made out on the part of the gas fitter. He had been a gas fitter for seven years, and had served his time to the business. When called in by the plaintiff’s husband to ascertain where the gas was leaking, he examined the gas fixtures in the basement, when he said the smell of gas was no.t strong enough to do any harm with a light, and that he had no reason to suppose then that it was dangerous
Loew and J. F. Daly, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.
A motion for leave to carry the case to the Court of Appeals was afterwards heard before Robinson, Larremore and Van Brunt, JJ., and the motion denied.