Dmytro Maksymenko v. Consumers Energy Corporation

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 2026
Docket372819
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dmytro Maksymenko v. Consumers Energy Corporation (Dmytro Maksymenko v. Consumers Energy Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dmytro Maksymenko v. Consumers Energy Corporation, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinions

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

DMYTRO MAKSYMENKO, UNPUBLISHED April 27, 2026 Plaintiff-Appellant, 9:52 AM

and

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,

Intervening Plaintiff,

v No. 372819 Oakland Circuit Court CONSUMERS ENERGY COMPANY, LC No. 2023-198923-NO

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and O’BRIEN and YOUNG, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals as of right from the stipulated order dismissing the claim of intervening plaintiff, the Department of Health and Human Services (“DHHS”), to challenge an order granting summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) (no genuine issue of material fact) in favor of defendant, Consumers Energy Company (“Consumers Energy” or “the company”). We reverse.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This matter stems from a gas explosion and fire at a house in Commerce Township, Michigan (“the property”). Plaintiff lived at the house at the time of the explosion with his mother, Lyudmyla Krykun, who owned the property. The house had two pipelines: (1) an underground natural-gas pipeline running upstream from a gas main across the street and connecting to the inlet of the meter attached to the front of the house (hereinafter, “the gas line”; also referred to as “the upstream line” or “the service line”); and (2) a fuel line running downstream from the outlet of the meter exposed along the exterior of the house and underneath the deck, and connecting to the south furnace closet inside of the house (hereinafter, “the fuel line” or “the downstream line”). At the

-1- time of the explosion, Krykun was out of town. Before the explosion, plaintiff was inside the house and his friend, Oleksandr Filippov, was on the porch. After the explosion, the Commerce Township Fire Department and Oakland County Sheriff’s Office arrived to contain the fire, locate the victims, and investigate the scene. It is undisputed that plaintiff sustained severe injuries.

Six butane tanks were recovered from the property, three of which were empty. Plaintiff stated he never used any of the butane tanks. Marijuana plants and other processing equipment were found on the property. Less than two weeks later, there was a joint site investigation at the property. Consumers Energy performed a pressure test on the gas line and found no leaks. Investigators from Farm Bureau Insurance Company, the homeowner’s insurer, performed a flow test on the fuel line using nitrogen and found three leaks (however, one of the leaks was “very small”). A lab inspection of the fuel line occurred later. Plaintiff stated he did not smell anything before the explosion or feel any “strange symptoms.” Krykun did not smell any gas before she went out of town. Before the explosion, Filippov did not smell anything “out of the ordinary[.]”

About one month before the explosion, Consumers Energy replaced the gas line at the property in an effort to replace “vintage” lines. A crew spent one day replacing the old copper gas line to one made of plastic. The gas main was made of steel. The company owned the gas line and the meter attached to the house, but Krykun owned the fuel line as the homeowner at the time. The crew located the “T attachment” of the gas main, or the connection point. William Neill began digging near the gas main, and the crew used an excavator to dig “the remainder.” One of the workers and crew leader, Alexander Hitt, “remove[d] the riser from the meter,” or the copper line, to ensure the gas to the house was “shut.” A welder “retired” the copper gas line and a new connection point was welded on to the gas main.

To install the new line, the crew “missiled the road” to access underneath the road up to the property line. A missile is “a pneumatic tool that you attach an air line to,” which “uses air pressure to bore itself through the ground[.]” Several crew members used hand shovels to dig a hole extending about 4 to 5 feet away from the meter on the house “to expose the service line.” A “rat tail,” also known as a trencher, was a machine used to cut “through the dirt” to create a trench. The rat tail was used to connect the hole near the house to the hole at the end of the road. The crew installed the new plastic pipe in the trench. The new plastic pipe was first connected to the gas main. The service line was connected to the meter using a riser. Hitt went to the gas main, where he “attach[ed] the gas service” and tested the air. After the new plastic gas line was connected to the gas main, either Hitt or Ian Chilcote performed an air pressure test on the gas line, beginning with the new connection on the gas main to ensure there were “no leaks.” The gas line was air tested from the new connection “up to the house,” which included “an air test in the lock wing that’s at the riser.” After air testing, the gas main was tapped and gas was introduced “into the new service.” After verifying someone was inside the house, a shadow test was performed at the property, which involved “introduc[ing] gas into the household” through the meter. The shadow test indicated there were no gas leaks inside the house. There was also a “soap test” performed to check for leaks on the “external portion” of the service line and at the meter. After testing, the trench and holes were backfilled. After the gas was turned on, a worker entered the house to relight the gas appliances.

The record included the opinions from three individuals regarding potential causes of the explosion. Elizabeth C. Buc, Ph.D., P.E., IAAI-CFI, from the Fire and Materials Research

-2- Laboratory, LLC, was a materials engineer and fire investigator. Buc processed the fire scene during the joint investigation, and tested the butane tanks and the fuel line. Buc considered two potential causes for the gas explosion: (1) natural gas and (2) butane. Buc opined the explosion was caused by butane gas and the leaks in the fuel line were caused by the “explosion and post- explosion activities[.]” Peter Wood, a licensed heating contractor, builder, and master plumber, visited the property after the explosion on one occasion. Wood opined the work performed by Consumers Energy in replacing the copper service line “disturbed the downstream piping system after the meter,” and “more likely than not . . . could have caused a gas leak that created the explosion.” Wood believed the explosion was caused by natural gas. He stated Consumers Energy was responsible for ensuring the upstream and downstream lines do not leak and are “properly installed and pressure tested[.]” Wood stated the torque from the “heavy equipment” also “disturbed the piping on the home side.” Robert Miller, an explosion and fire investigator, was also at the site inspection. Miller disagreed that butane was “the probable cause” and, instead, did not rule out natural gas as a cause because there were leaks in the fuel line and “natural gas [was] definitely going to the house.” He stated there was a 3-foot-long section of “piping” of the fuel line in the furnace room that “could not be tested” because it was “too damaged.” Miller stated there was a “higher probability” natural gas caused the explosion.

Plaintiff filed a complaint, which included a claim of negligence against Consumers Energy. The DHHS moved to intervene to enforce its subrogation right as the state agency responsible for administering Medicaid. Consumers Energy responded and the trial court allowed the DHHS to intervene. The DHHS filed its complaint, asserting its right to recover for payments made for plaintiff’s medical care through Medicaid.

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Dmytro Maksymenko v. Consumers Energy Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dmytro-maksymenko-v-consumers-energy-corporation-michctapp-2026.