144 P. 1152 | Or. | 1914
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs strongly tended to show that the trees in question began to show signs of dying early in the month of July, when the leaves began to turn yellow and two of the trees actually died soon afterward. About this time, the plaintiffs, being apprehensive that the sickly appearance of the trees was caused by gas, dug down into the parking near them and became convinced that gas was escaping. They notified the company to that ef
“The escape of gas from the defendant’s main was, in the absence of any exculpatory explanation, some evidence of neglect * * and when to this was added the testimony, already quoted, of one of the plaintiff’s witnesses in respect to the appearance of the aperture through which it escaped, prima facie case was made out against the defendant.”
In that case the defendant attributed the escape of gas to the separation of the joints of the pipe, due to
“If such injury to a gas-main be a natural and probable consequence of the construction of a sewer in close proximity to it, and the defendant had knowledge, or ought to have had knowledge, of the construction of this particular sewer, it was its duty to efficiently guard against the damage that was likely to be sustained. * * It could not shift the responsibility upon the municipality or its contractor * * and it was for the jury to determine whether, from the notoriety attending the construction of a sewer, a gas company having a proper system of inspection would, or ought to, have knowledge within a shorter time than elapsed between the commencement of work upon the sewer in question and the discovery of the leak.”
It is like the doctrine of Boyd v. Portland Electric Co., 40 Or. 126 (66 Pac. 576, 57 L. R. A. 619), to this effect that:
“In actions against electric companies for injuries received from contact with live wires in public ways proof of the breaking of the wires and of the happening of the accident makes a prima facie ease of negligence. ’ ’
See, also, Gould v. Winona Gas Co., 100 Minn. 258 (111 N. W. 254, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 889).
In other words, considering the inherently dangerous nature of illuminating gas and the duty of the defendant to control it, an instance of res ipsa loquitur occurs whenever the gas escapes to the injury of persons or property.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed. Rehearing Denied.
Rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing.
(145 Pac. 660.)
delivered the opinion of the court.
“Some of the testimony tends to attribute the break to' the fact that a water-main had been laid across the gas-main by the city authorities, and that the refilling of the excavation caused a pressure against the gas-main, which it could not withstand resulting in die breach from whieh the gas escaped.”
The petition for rehearing is based upon the hypothesis that the excerpt quoted is not a true statement of the fact. According to the petition, the inaccuracy consists in stating that the water-main was laid across the gas-main instead of directly beneath it. The opinion does not state that one main was laid upon the other, and it can make little difference whether it was laid transversely above or below or paralled above or below the other conduit, for the cause of the break was attributed to the manner in which the excavation was refilled and not to the contact of one main with the other. There was abundant testimony that the gas escaped; that the trees died; and that the break in the gas-main was caused by the defective manner in which the excavation for the city water-main was closed. Whether the defendant was negligent in not discovering the leak and controlling the escaping gas was a question of fact for the jury, to be determined from all the circumstances disclosed by the testimony; and hence it was an error to allow the nonsuit. As it
Rehearing Denied.