easy, but the law does not make that the test. The sixth
suggested precaution is watchfulness and provision of new supports. This also is a belated suggestion. There is not sufficient evidence to sustain the onus resting on the Company. If the onus were on the Corporation I should feel considerable difficulty. The renewed subsidences, the attraction of water from various sources, the length of time that had elapsed since 1911 to make inspection advisable. are all factors which make for the Company's case. But, on the other hand, both parties were in a position to know the system adopted in 1911 and both knew of the prior accidents they Were equally aware of the lapse of time, and, had it been SO manifest or desirable to periodically examine the condition of the pit and the pipe, there is no reason I can find satisfactory why something was not said by the Company or why the Company did not itself seek to examine the spot. Again, the long absence of the suggestion tells against it.
On the whole, therefore, I am not satisfied that the negligence is proved.
GAVAN DUFFY AND STARKE JJ. This case involves a dispute between the Metropolitan Gas Company and the Corporation of the City of Melbourne. The Gas Company, pursuant to its Acts, laid down, many years ago, a gas main in Flinders Street, Melbourne. There existed, at the time, an open channel drain, running down Elizabeth Street, Melbourne, emptying into a box drain which passed under Flinders Street and the Hobson's Bay Railway, and discharging into the River Yarra. About the years 1883, 1884, the Corporation constructed a barrel drain in place of the open channel in Elizabeth Street, and also, apparently, a silt chamber in Flinders Street, and then continued the barrel drain across Flinders Street and under the railway to the River Yarra. A portion of the gas main passed through the silt chamber after the construction of the latter by the Corporation. In each of the years 1891, 1901, 1911 and 1921, the gas main was fractured, but the fractures do not,
SO far as the evidence goes, appear to have been at the same point. In 1891 a fracture of the pipe seems to have occurred within the silt chamber, and it was repaired by the insertion of a length of pipe