Charles Roach and Joyce Roach v. Dixie Gas Company Ben Thomas Williams, Jr., Individually and as Owner and Manager of Dixie Gas Company Semstream, L.P. Santie Wholesale Oil Company, A Division of Blue Rhino Reliable Propane and John Does 1 through 10

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 14, 2011
DocketW2010-01496-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Charles Roach and Joyce Roach v. Dixie Gas Company Ben Thomas Williams, Jr., Individually and as Owner and Manager of Dixie Gas Company Semstream, L.P. Santie Wholesale Oil Company, A Division of Blue Rhino Reliable Propane and John Does 1 through 10 (Charles Roach and Joyce Roach v. Dixie Gas Company Ben Thomas Williams, Jr., Individually and as Owner and Manager of Dixie Gas Company Semstream, L.P. Santie Wholesale Oil Company, A Division of Blue Rhino Reliable Propane and John Does 1 through 10) 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.

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Charles Roach and Joyce Roach v. Dixie Gas Company Ben Thomas Williams, Jr., Individually and as Owner and Manager of Dixie Gas Company Semstream, L.P. Santie Wholesale Oil Company, A Division of Blue Rhino Reliable Propane and John Does 1 through 10, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON March 24, 2011 Session1

CHARLES ROACH AND JOYCE ROACH V. DIXIE GAS COMPANY; BEN THOMAS WILLIAMS, JR., INDIVIDUALLY AND AS OWNER AND MANAGER OF DIXIE GAS COMPANY; SEMSTREAM, L.P.; SANTIE WHOLESALE OIL COMPANY, A DIVISION OF BLUE RHINO RELIABLE PROPANE; AND JOHN DOES 1 THROUGH 10

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hardeman County No. 06-02-0140 J. Weber McCraw, Judge _________________________________

No. W2010-01496-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 14, 2011

This lawsuit for damages arises out of an explosion. The plaintiff customers went to the defendant propane gas facility to fill their recreational vehicle with propane. Soon after they arrived, one of the propane hoses began to leak, and propane gas vapor began to envelope the premises. After a short period of time, the propane gas tank exploded, causing devastating property damage and destroying the plaintiffs’ recreational vehicle. The plaintiffs filed this lawsuit against the defendants, alleging that they were near the explosion site when the explosion occurred, and that the explosion caused them numerous physical and psychological injuries. The defendants admitted liability and compensated the plaintiffs for their property damage. The defendants claimed, however, that the plaintiffs were not present at the explosion site when the explosion occurred and did not sustain any personal injuries

1 After oral argument in this cause, the Court asked the parties to submit supplemental briefs on the issue of whether Tenn. R. Civ. P. 35 requires an appointed medical examiner to be “independent,” and the Court considered the appeal after the filing of the supplemental briefs.

To say that the appellate record in this case was problematic is an understatement. The record, consisting of 10,578 pages in 66 volumes, had little organization. The Circuit Court Clerk specifically noted numerous problems necessitating the return of various transcripts and exhibits for correction. The transcripts and exhibits had no index. The only table of contents for the entire 10,000 plus page record listed documents alphabetically, which is of little use due to the innumerable ways in which a given document may be titled, and gives the page number, without reference to the volume. Such almost random organization in a record of this size necessitates an undue amount of judicial time. We note that caselaw from this Court consistently holds that the appellant is charged with providing the appellate court with a record that will enable the Court to adequately consider the issues raised on appeal. caused by the explosion. After a jury trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants, determining that the explosion did not cause any personal injuries to the plaintiffs and awarding zero damages. The plaintiffs now appeal. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Edward M. Bearman, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellants Charles Roach and Joyce Roach

John V. McCoy and Eugene M. LaFlamme, Waukesha, Wisconsin; and Kenneth R. Rudstrom, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellees Dixie Gas Company and Benjamin Thomas Williams, Jr.

OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

Background

Defendant/Appellee Dixie Gas Company (“Dixie Gas”) is a retail propane business on Highway 125 in Bolivar, Tennessee. Dixie Gas is owned by Defendant/Appellee Benjamin Thomas Williams, Jr. (“Mr. Williams”).

On April 22, 2005, Plaintiff/Appellants Charles Roach (“Mr. Roach”) and his wife, Joyce Roach (“Mrs. Roach”), then 56 years old and 54 years old respectively, visited Dixie Gas to buy propane for their recreation vehicle (“RV”). Mr. Roach went into the Dixie Gas office to get assistance, while Mrs. Roach stayed in or near the RV. When Mr. Roach went inside, a Dixie Gas employee, Mary Gomez (“Ms. Gomez”), was in the office talking on the telephone.

While Mr. Roach waited for Ms. Gomez to finish her telephone conversation, he heard a loud noise. The noise turned out to be the rupture of a hose on the propane tank near the Roaches’ RV. Mr. Roach went outside the Dixie Gas office and saw a vapor cloud beginning to envelope the RV and a stream of liquid propane flowing from the propane bulk storage unit. The events that followed in the next several minutes are the subject of sharp dispute between the parties.

-2- According to the Roaches, Mr. Roach told Ms. Gomez to call 911 and to flee. Ms. Gomez ran from the facility. Mr. Roach then realized that Mrs. Roach was still in their RV, which by then was engulfed in the dense gray vapor cloud from the leaking propane gas. He found Mrs. Roach in a semi-conscious state inside the RV and either pulled her out or urged her to get herself out. Once out of the RV, the Roaches began to run away from the worsening scene. As they neared the front gate at the entrance of the facility on Highway 125, the leaking propane ignited, causing a huge explosion. The explosion blew the roof off of the Dixie Gas office, causing it to rise some thirty feet in the air. The pressure wave from the explosion knocked Mr. and Mrs. Roach to the ground. The Roaches picked themselves up off the ground and again began running. As they ran, Mr. Roach saw fire trucks down the road, backing up, but did not see fire trucks at the entrance gate. Mr. and Mrs. Roach made their way to a ditch behind a nearby mobile home. As they sheltered in the ditch, a second explosion occurred, so loud that Mr. Roach put his hands over Mrs. Roach’s ears to shield them.

The initial explosions triggered the explosion of numerous smaller canisters of propane gas on the Dixie Gas property.2 Fire department personnel then backed away from the scene, concerned about the flying propane gas canisters. Mr. and Mrs. Roach remained in the nearby ditch for some time, and when the explosions subsided, they ran into the woods to get further away. When they exited the woods, they came upon a nearby homeowner who called the Roaches’ friend, their insurance agent, to come and pick up Mr. and Mrs. Roach. The insurance agent friend arrived shortly thereafter and took the Roaches home. The Roaches’ RV was left on the Dixie Gas premises, destroyed by the propane gas explosions and fire.

The Roaches did not immediately report any injuries from the incident. However, they later claimed that they suffered substantial physical and psychological injury as a result of the incident, including hearing loss, tinnitus,3 speech disorder,4 vertigo, post traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”), and depression. About two months after the explosion incident, Mr. and Mrs. Roach sought medical treatment for these injuries. Mr. Roach claimed that his injuries from the incident completely disabled him from working and cost him millions of dollars in potential earnings.

2 The small canisters were referred to as “grill” canisters, as for a backyard barbeque grill. 3 Tinnitus is sometimes referred to as a “ringing” in the ears. One expert defined “tinnitus” as “a noise heard in one or both of your ears that is not present in your environment. In other words, you are hearing it but it is not in your environment.” 4 Mr. Roach said that he developed a vocal pattern abnormality referred to in the record as “baby talk.”

-3- Dixie Gas had a sharply contrasting view of the events. Dixie Gas acknowledged that the propane gas leak occurred, that Mr. and Mrs. Roach were on the Dixie Gas premises when the leak began, and that the ensuing explosions destroyed the Roaches’ RV. However, Dixie Gas maintained that, by the time the explosions occurred, Mr. and Mrs.

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Charles Roach and Joyce Roach v. Dixie Gas Company Ben Thomas Williams, Jr., Individually and as Owner and Manager of Dixie Gas Company Semstream, L.P. Santie Wholesale Oil Company, A Division of Blue Rhino Reliable Propane and John Does 1 through 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-roach-and-joyce-roach-v-dixie-gas-company-ben-thomas-williams-tennctapp-2011.