Mississinewa Min. Co. v. Patton

Decision Date03 November 1891
Citation28 N.E. 1113,129 Ind. 472
PartiesMississinewa Min. Co. v. Patton.
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from circuit court, Grant county; R. T. St. John, Judge. Affirmed.

Action for damages by Cora M. Patton against the Mississinewa Mining Company. Defendant demurred. Overruled. Defendant appealed.C. E. Shipley, for appellant. Wm. H. Carroll and Griffith D. Dean, for appellee.

MILLER, J.

The appellee, Cora M. Patton, brought this action against the appellant to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the appellant. In the caption of her complaint the name of her husband appears as a co-plaintiff, but in the body of the complaint no mention is made of him in any manner. The property alleged to have been destroyed is averred to be her property, and no attempt is made to state a joint cause of action. Under these circumstances, we must regard the name of the husband on the caption as surplusage, and hold that the complaint is not bad on demurrer for failure to present a good cause of action in favor of both plaintiffs, under the rule laid down in Berkshire v. Shultz, 25 Ind. 523, and cases following it. See, also, Stewart v. Babbs, 120 Ind. 568, 22 N. E. Rep. 770.

The complaint is in a single paragraph, and charges that the plaintiff was the owner of a dwelling-house and lot in the town of Marion; that the house was of the value of $1,250, and that it contained personal property belonging to her of the value of $750; that the defendant was a corporation organized under the laws of Indiana, being engaged in furnishing natural gas for fuel and light to the citizens of Marion, having and owning mains and pipes, laid in the streets of said town; that it so carelessly laid and constructed said pipes and gas-mains as to allow and permit such gas to flow and escape from its line of pipe, through which such natural gas was being conducted, over, upon, through, and into plaintiff's lot aforesaid, and into the dwelling aforesaid, and to accumulate therein in such quantity that the same came in contact with a lighted lamp therein, without the fault of plaintiff, and exploded, and set fire to and destroyed the building and its contents, without any fault of the plaintiff, to her damage in the sum of $2,000. A demurrer was overruled to this complaint, and the ruling is assigned as error.

The first objection to the complaint pointed out in the brief of counsel is that it does not show that the defendant owed the plaintiff any duty, of which negligence of the defendant could be construed a breach. The complaint is not very full or specific in the statement of the acts of negligence of which the defendant was guilty, or of the manner in which the plaintiff was injured, but it does show that the plaintiff owned a lot in the town, and that the defendant had its mains and pipes laid in the streets of the town. This, we think, is sufficient to show that the defendant owed a duty to the property owners of the town to use reasonable and ordinary care in so planting its pipes and...

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