Current v. Columbia Gas of Kentucky, Inc.

383 S.W.2d 139, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 26, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 383 S.W.2d 139 (Current v. Columbia Gas of Kentucky, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Current v. Columbia Gas of Kentucky, Inc., 383 S.W.2d 139, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 19 (Ky. 1964).

Opinion

DAVIS, Commissioner.

The appellants sued appellee in the Clark Circuit Court seeking damages for personal injuries allegedly induced by carbon monoxide gas. The damage claims are predicated on the averred negligence of appellee in cutting gas into improperly vented appliances used by appellants. A jury- was unable to agree upon a verdict, and was discharged. Thereupon the trial court sustained appel-lee’s motion for judgment as if its prior motion for directed verdict had been sustained. CR 50.02.

• Appellants present several grounds upon which reversal is urged, which may be summarized as: (1) There was sufficient evidence to warrant submission of the issues to the jury; (2) errors were committed in refusing evidence offered by appellants and in admitting evidence in behalf of appellee; and (3) improper instructions were given and proper instructions were refused.

The appellants are James and Elsie Mae Current, husband and wife, and their five minor children. The entire Current family moved into a rented- residence in Winchester on October 28, 1960. The home contained a living room, kitchen, dining room, two bedrooms, a bath and a basement. The first floor living area of the residence contains 6,736 cubic feet; the basement area has 7,730 cubic feet. Since the house had been vacant, the gas had been cut off. Ap-pellee inspected the premises and cut the gas on.

Three gas appliances were used in the Current home. There was a 65,000 BTU space heater, located in front of a fireplace in-the living room, a double oven stove, having four burners on top, located in the kitchen, and a water heater in the basement, identified in the record as a “side arm” type. *141 There was no vent on the kitchen stove, but all parties concede that it is usual practice for such an appliance to be utilized without venting. The side arm water heater was vented by a pipe run from the basement, up an outside wall of the house; this vent had its outlet below the roof line of the Tiouse, near a rear bedroom window. There is sharp dispute in the evidence whether the space heater in the living room was vented.

An employee of appellee cut the gas into the house and lit the pilot light on the space heater. He testified that at the time he cut the gas into the house the space heater was vented. He acknowledged that his instructions from his employer as well as his experience caused his knowledge that it is unsafe to bum gas in an appliance of 65,000 BTU capacity unless the appliance is properly vented. The same witness, said that his inspection of the space heater, when he cut in the gas, revealed to him that it was burning normally and was not dirty.

It was also shown by the witness that he inspected the side arm heater, and observed that a vent pipe led from it through an outside wall. He did not inspect that vent pipe to determine its ultimate point of outlet, but testified that his company’s requirement, and good practice, directed that the outlet on such a vent should be at least two feet above the roof line of the house.

The residence in which appellants resided was of concrete block construction, and was porous. On the night of February 2 and in the early morning hours of February 3, 1961, the weather warmed somewhat and a freezing rain and sleet occurred. Appellants reason that these circumstances may have somewhat sealed the otherwise porous walls.

About midnight on February 2 the appellants became ill; they called a doctor. When he arrived at about 1:00 a. m. some of the family were ill and vomiting. The physician concluded they were suffering a mild gastric upset. Although he noted the house seemed abnormally warm, especially when he was standing, he did not detect any gas odor. It is shown, without contradiction, that carbon monoxide is colorless and odorless.

A fellow employee of James Current became apprehensive when the latter did not report for work at the normal time. The coworker went to the Current home, but received no response to her knocks upon the door. Moans were heard from within the house, but there was no answer to the repeated calls of the witness. Upon entering the house this witness found Mrs. Current, on the floor in.the living room; some of the children were on the two couches in the living room — James Current was “half on the bed” in one of the back bedrooms. All were unconscious. Efforts to. arouse the parents failed, The witness obtained aid from the police department and,the emergency squad of the fire department.

The assistant, fire chief ¡recounted, that all of the appellants -appeared- unconscious when he arrived. Some of them-even seeiti-.ed to be not breathing; he super vised, ad-•mihistration of. oxygen, and resuscitation to the victims who showed no- sign'.of .breathing. He remembered that an appearance-of soot, or some settlement, was observed ■around the mouths and nostrils -of at least three of them! He did not observe Mrs. 'Current’s condition in’this respect: '

There is substantive evidence from competent doctors that the appellants sustained injury from carbon monoxide poisoning. The record reflects substantial injuries to some of the appellants, but that matter is not now involved.

For appellants, several witnesses testified that the space heater was not vented when it was put in operation on October 28th, and that it was never vented prior to the claimed carbon monoxide poisoning of the appellants. There is no question that a submittable jury issue was created as to whether it was vented; the question is whether the evidence warranted submission to the jury, even if the space heater was not vented.

*142 ■ Appellee presented. Professor Warren A. Cook, who qualified as a skilled expert as -to the effects of gases in the air upon humans. The witness conducted tests of the space heater (although appellants challenged the integrity of the heater when tested). Professor Cook testified that if the space heater had been vented, it was his judgment that it would not have been the origin of sufficient carbon monoxide to visibly adversely affect humans. He said th.at when he tested the space heater, after it had been removed to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, it burned with a blue flame. The witness said such flame is normal when the appliance is operating properly. He pointed out that if the appliance became clogged with lint or other foreign material, the flame would tend to become yellow and that the burner would smoke. Under those conditions, if the heater was vented, it was his opinion that the carbon monoxide would be carried off through the vent sufficiently to forestall injury. However, he testified that if the heater’s flame smoked extensively and the heater was unvented, enough carbon monoxide would be introduced into the house to cause human injury and unconsciousness.

Moreover, the same expert pointed out that an unvented heater would have greater tendency to become clogged than one properly vented. He also observed that the clogging process normally would be a relatively progressive one, culminating in a greatly increased degree of clogging at a “particular time.” The “particular time” to which he referred was described as being when accumulated deposits of material dropped down to further clog passageways.

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Bluebook (online)
383 S.W.2d 139, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/current-v-columbia-gas-of-kentucky-inc-kyctapphigh-1964.