264 P. 532 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
This is an action for damages for personal injuries arising by reason of an explosion in a manhole or pit in one of the public streets of Pomona.
Appellant, Southern Counties Gas Company, was a public utility corporation supplying the residents of Pomona with gas at the time of the injury complained of and for some time prior thereto. The company about December 14, 1922, constructed a pit four feet by six feet and five feet deep at the intersection of Ninth and Reservoir Streets, and was using the public street by virtue of a franchise. The pit was built of concrete, and the pipes of the gas company had been laid and the valves placed before the cement was poured, the pit being constructed for the purpose of making accessible three shut-off valves and a regulating valve in the gas line. When the excavation was made it was found that a shut-off valve of the water company would be located in the pit.
From December, 1922, to January, 1924, the pit was inspected monthly by the gas company, that is, someone visited the pit, opened it and oiled the regulating valve. Covering the pit there was an eighteen by twenty-five inch cast-iron cover. *83
On January 10, 1924, respondent Harvey H. Smith, being then an employee of the water company, went to the intersection of Ninth and Reservoir Streets for the purpose of shutting off the water. He went into the pit, not knowing that it belonged to the gas company or that the gas company's pipes were located therein. Being unable to see, he struck a match, and the explosion occurred, causing the injuries complained of.
The court gave judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, together with costs, and from this judgment defendant Southern Counties Gas Company has appealed. It is appellant's contention, first, that the doctrine of res ipsaloquitur does not apply, and, second, that if it does apply, the defendant has met the burden imposed.
In Judson v. Giant Powder Co.,
In Kahn v. Triest-Rosenberg Cap Co.,
In Lippert v. Pacific Sugar Corp., supra, which was a case where death resulted from the explosion of a boiler, the court says: "The cases are industriously cited and considered inJudson v. Giant Powder Co.,
This doctrine is followed in a number of other states. InChiles v. Ft. Smith Com. Co.,
Appellant in support of its contention has cited us to several cases; all but one, however, are from other jurisdictions, the one California case being Union Investment Co. v. SanFrancisco Gas Electric Co.,
As to the other cases cited as holding that the mere fact of an explosion in a building furnished with gas does not establish aprima facie case or raise a presumption of negligence, nor does the fact that gas was found accumulated in a pit, though unusual and not according to the ordinary occurrence of events, give rise to a prima facie presumption of negligence, it may be said that the cases cited do not parallel the present case, but if they did, they are not authority, for, as is said in Kahn v.Triest-Rosenberg Cap Co., supra, "the rule is settled the other way in this state."
[1] In the present case the pit containing the gas pipes had been used for more than a year before the accident happened, was under the management of appellant gas company, and the accident was "such as in the ordinary course of things does not happen if those who have the management use proper care," and therefore the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies (Judson v. GiantPowder Co., supra).
[2] As to appellant's second contention that if the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does apply, it has met the burden imposed, it may be said that the evidence offered by appellant merely creates a conflict and upon such conflict the judgment will not be disturbed on appeal. [3] Appellant offered testimony to show the exercise of due care and to rebut the presumption of negligence. Witnesses connected with the appellant company testified that following the accident they tested the gas-pipes in the pit with soapsuds and found no leak; that there was a four-inch vent-pipe running from the pit to the corner of the street and coming up between *86 the curb and the sidewalk, and also as to the character of the pit — that it was constructed modernly, with the latest improved devices or structures to prevent accumulation of gas. With the presumption of negligence, however, arising from the explosion, the question was one of fact as to whether the gas company had met the burden imposed upon it of showing the exercise of due care.
The judgment is affirmed.
Tyler, P.J., and Knight, J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on April 5, 1928.
All the Justices concurred.