Act-O-Lane Gas Service Co. v. Hall

248 S.W.2d 398, 35 Tenn. App. 500, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 10, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 248 S.W.2d 398 (Act-O-Lane Gas Service Co. v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Act-O-Lane Gas Service Co. v. Hall, 248 S.W.2d 398, 35 Tenn. App. 500, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 88 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

HOWARD, J.

These consolidated cases are for damages resulting from an alleged breach of contract. The declarations allege in snstance that on or about September 13, 1947, a representative of the Act-O-Lane Gas Service Company, hereinafter referred to as defendant, entered- into a contract with plaintiff and his wife to furnish them a gas known as propane gas with which to heat their home, and that defendant’s agent represented that said gas would produce a clean dry heat better than any other heat on the market; that defendant breached its contract because the heat furnished was neither good, clean nor dry, hut instead gave off a heavy moisture which damaged everything in the house; that the “entire house was continually sweating and water was draining down the walls,” and “the bed clothing, clothes and underclothing stayed continuously damp,” and everyone in the house contracted a cold.

In the administrator’s suit it is alleged that plaintiff’s intestate, Carrie B. Hall, stayed in the home all the time, and that her clothes and the bedclothing became damp and wet because of the moisture produced by the gas; that in November, 1947, she contracted bronchitis and pneumonia, and that her condition later became so serious that she had to be rushed to the hospital; that her death in November, 1948, was “directly and proximately caused by the defendant’s breach of its contract.”

In the case of C. S. Hall, individually, the declaration is in three counts. In the first count Hall sues for doctor bills, hospital hills and other expenses alleged to have *505 been incurred in connection with bis wife’s illness, and for loss of services of bis wife. In tbe second count Hall sues to recover for damages to bis personal property alleged to bave been caused by breach of the contract, and in tbe third count Hall sues to rescind tbe contract and to recover tbe amount paid defendant.

To each of tbe declarations tbe defendant entered pleas of not guilty and numerous special pleas as follows: (1) That it bad not contracted as alleged; (2) that the plaintiff, C. S. Hall, bad not suffered or been damaged in tbe manner alleged; (3) that plaintiff and bis intestate bad negligently failed to properly use tbe gas and appliances ; (4) that the illness and death of Mrs. Hall was not due to tbe causes alleged; (5) that she bad been in a diseased condition long before the alleged contract was made; and (6) that she and her husband bad failed to secure medical attention when first needed.

Tbe cases bave been tried three times. At the first trial tbe jury could not agree and a mistrial was ordered. At tbe second trial there were verdicts for tbe plaintiffs and a new trial was granted. On tbe third trial tbe jury returned verdicts in favor of O. S. Hall, administrator, for $5,000, and in favor of Hall for $2,632.50. These verdicts were approved by tbe trial court, and upon defendant’s motion for a new trial being overruled, this appeal was granted and perfected. A wayside bill of exceptions having been preserved of tbe first trial, this appeal involves only the first and last trials.

Following the established practice of our appellate courts to consider the record of each trial separately and in the order of time in which they occurred, we shall now proceed to consider tbe assignments of error directed to tbe first trial.

*506 The defendant’s chief complaint seems to be based on the trial court’s refusal to sustain its motion for directed verdicts made at the conclusion of all the evidence, because, it is insisted, no evidence was adduced by the plaintiffs on which verdicts could be sustained.

The record reveals that the defendant corporation was organized in 1947, with its principal office in Chattanooga, and that it subsequently engaged in the sale and distribution of propane gas and various types of household appliances and heating equipment in which said gas was used; that in September, 1947, defendant’s representative entered into a contract with C. 8. Hall and his wife, Carrie B. Hall, to sell them appliances and propane gas with which to heat their home.

According to Hall’s proof, the defendant’s agent represented that the gas would produce a clean, dry heat and was better than any other heat on the market; that if there was any moisture in the gas it would burn the moisture up, it being so much hotter than any other gas ; that upon these representations an agreement was entered into and defendant was permitted to install in the Hall home five unvented “space” or “room” heaters, with the necessary pipe connections to a tank placed in the back of the house where the gas was stored, at a cost of $382.50, and that no instructions were given as to how the heaters were to be operated or how the gas should be used. About the middle of November, 1947, during a cool spell, one of the heaters was started, and on the following day it was discovered that everything in the house was covered with moisture and water was running down the windows, doors and walls onto the floor; that later on the house became wet, damp and mildewed from the use of the gas, and the- furniture became warped and buckled and the veneer peeled off; that the paint on the *507 walls and woodwork peeled off and tlie plaster cracked, and the glue in the dining- room table melted and the table fell apart; that the piano and typewriter became damp and the keys stuck, and the entire interior of the house and everything- in it was badly damaged from the dampness and moisture produced by the gas. As soon as this condition was detected by plaintiff he immediately notified the defendant who sent out its heating- engineer, R. T. Lambert, and after a thorough investigation Lambert admitted that plaintiff and his family could not stand the moisture produced by the gas.

It appears from the proof that J. H. Murdock and M. 0. Brannan, two other users of the gas, complained to defendant at about the same time, and that Lambert went to the Brannan home where in the presence of Bran-nan, Murdock and plaintiff he undertook to correct the condition by moving- the heaters around in different parts of the house, and by opening- windows to allow ventilation but that the moisture could not be prevented and the (Brannan) “house was completely wet from one end to the other.”

In describing- Lambert’s efforts to prevent the excess moisture, Brannan testified:

“Q. 37. Now, Mr. Brannan, I will ask you if during- the experiments if you burned as many as one, two or three, four or five heaters, if you burned all of them at one time and part of them at other times ?
A. That’s right, that’s right.
‘ ‘ Q. 38. Did you burn them every conceivable way at the suggestion of Mr. Lambert that you could1?
‘£ A. Well, I did, and Mr. Lambert even was there two hours and done the controllings, most of it himself.
*508 “Q. 39. You just let Mm handle it himself? A. I told him to go ahead and handle it and see what he could do about it.
‘ ‘ Q. 40. What was the result of burning the heaters when he handled it? A. No different. He throwed up his hands and said it was all — he couldn’t do any thing else about it.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 398, 35 Tenn. App. 500, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/act-o-lane-gas-service-co-v-hall-tennctapp-1951.