Allen v. Riley Mobile Home Sales, Inc.

307 So. 2d 773
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 12, 1975
Docket4865
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 307 So. 2d 773 (Allen v. Riley Mobile Home Sales, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Riley Mobile Home Sales, Inc., 307 So. 2d 773 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

307 So.2d 773 (1975)

Kenneth M. ALLEN, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
RILEY MOBILE HOME SALES, INC., and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 4865.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

February 12, 1975.

*774 Bolen & Halcomb by Gregory S. Erwin, Alexandria, for defendants-appellants.

Henry W. Berthard, III, Coushatta, for third party defendants-appellees.

Whitehead & McCoy by Charles R. Whitehead, Jr., Gerard F. Thomas, Jr., Natchitoches, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before FRUGE, CULPEPPER and DOMENGEAUX, JJ.

FRUGE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Kenneth Allen, brought this action against defendants, Riley Mobile Home Sales of Louisiana, Inc. and its liability insurer, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, for injuries sustained by the plaintiff in November of 1972, when the central heating unit in his wife's mobile home exploded. A third party demand was made against Pargas of Natchitoches, Inc. and its insurer, American Motorists Insurance Company by defendants Riley and Liberty Mutual. After trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff on the main demand and in favor of the third party defendant on the third party demand. Defendants Riley and Liberty Mutual have appealed from that judgment. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part.

In February, 1972, Mrs. Kenneth Allen, then Miss Janet Ainsworth, contracted with Riley to purchase a mobile home. In connection with the sale, the representative of Riley asked Miss Ainsworth what type of fuel would be used in the gas fixtures located in the mobile home. The reply was that butane and not natural gas would be used as the fuel for the appliances. This decision was indicated on a "check out sheet" prepared by the representative. The purpose of this sheet was to inform service men and inspectors, and employees of Riley of exactly what had to be done to prepare the mobile home for delivery to the purchaser. Specifically it indicated that the orifice on the heating unit in the mobile home would have to be changed from a natural gas orifice to one designed for the burning of butane.

Following the sale of the mobile home to the plaintiff's wife by Riley, a representative of Pargas came to the location of the home for the purpose of connecting up a butane system to the mobile home.

On the night prior to the accident plaintiff and his wife returned to the mobile home to find that the heating unit was off. Plaintiff turned the unit off and waited *775 until the next morning to try to relight it. The next morning the plaintiff attempted to relight the furnace following the lighting instructions supplied with the heating unit. Plaintiff suspected that something might be wrong when the blower in the furnace did not turn on. He immediately turned the pilot light off and decided to wait to relight the furnace. After waiting several minutes he repeated the process but again the blower did not come on. He then began to smell butane gas escaping and heard a spewing sound inside the furnace. He again decided to turn off the unit. At the same time he opened the door of the gas chamber in order to release the apparent build-up of pressure inside. When plaintiff opened this door the escaping gas caused a flame-out which caused the injuries sued on by the plaintiff.

Defendants Riley and Liberty Mutual have asserted several errors on the part of the trial judge. Before discussing these alleged errors, we will briefly discuss the trial judge's written reasons for judgment.

The trial court found that as a matter of fact, Pargas had no duty whatsoever to change the orifice in the heating unit. It was found that the plaintiff's wife had purchased the mobile home from Riley and specifically requested that the appliances in the home contain orifices for the use of butane rather than natural gas. The court accepted the testimony of one H. C. Cooper who checked the heater after the explosion and removed the natural gas orifice and installed a butane orifice. The court rejected the testimony of the employee of Riley indicating that a butane orifice had in fact been installed. This testimony was rejected because the employee could not remember the specific mobile home and testified only that he thought the proper orifice had been installed because a check list indicated that this work had been done. The court also found that Hezikiah Reed, the Pargas employee who connected the butane system to the mobile home, told the plaintiff's wife and mother-in-law that he had connected the gas to the kitchen stove which had the correct orifice but had not connected it to the heater. This information was apparently not relayed to the plaintiff himself. Mr. Reed testified that he did not actually look into the interior of the heater to inspect the orifice but observed the butane orifice attached to the exterior of the heating unit in a small seethrough package.

The court found that Riley in failing to install a proper orifice and in leading the plaintiff's wife into believing that the proper orifice had in fact been installed when it had not, had breached its duty of care and was therefore liable to the plaintiff for the damages sustained by him.

The court found that the witnesses testifying in the trial with regard to the use of butane in a natural gas orifice heater all agreed that the improper mixture of air and gas would cause excessive sooting. Although there was disagreement among the expert witnesses as to whether or not the heater ventilation pipe would become clogged by the excessive soot, the court was persuaded by Mr. Cooper that the sooted ventilation pipe became so restricted that the air flow to the flame in the heater became restricted to the point that the flame was snuffed out. There was sufficient air remaining to keep the small flame at the pilot light burning. The automatic cut-off valve on the heater which is activated by a thermocouple and which takes about 30 seconds to one minute to cool off allowed a sufficient amount of gas to accumulate in the heater so that when the plaintiff opened the small door to relieve the pressure which he thought might be building up in the heater from the escaping gas, the gas in the heater mixed with this air introduced by the opening of the door and an explosion took place when this mixture was ignited by the small flame of the pilot light.

The trial judge indicated in his written reasons for judgment that there was no doubt as to the injuries suffered by the plaintiff. Dr. Joseph Thomas testified that *776 he first saw the plaintiff on January 5, 1973, and found acute myoligamentous strain of the muscles in the neck. The plaintiff also complained of headaches. On subsequent examinations he found muscle spasms indicating continued strain. Dr. Thomas had the plaintiff examined by Dr. Frederick C. Boykin, a neurosurgeon, on two occasions. The plaintiff was also examined by Dr. Reginald Wheat for possible eye injury.

The court awarded the plaintiff $4,000 for his pain and suffering. There was some conflict in the evidence with reference to the number of days of work missed by the plaintiff but the court relied on the payroll records and found that six days of missed work was accurate and gave plaintiff recovery in the amount of $184.80 for those six days of work which he missed. Although the trailer belonged to the plaintiff's wife, who had purchased it prior to their marriage, the $18.03 expense incurred for the service call by Mr. Cooper on November 27, 1972, was found to be a debt of the community and one which the plaintiff was obligated to pay.

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307 So. 2d 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-riley-mobile-home-sales-inc-lactapp-1975.