Edmondson v. MacClesfield LP Gas Co., Inc.

642 S.E.2d 265, 182 N.C. App. 381, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 693
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 3, 2007
DocketCOA06-665
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 642 S.E.2d 265 (Edmondson v. MacClesfield LP Gas Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edmondson v. MacClesfield LP Gas Co., Inc., 642 S.E.2d 265, 182 N.C. App. 381, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 693 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

McGEE, Judge.

Plaintiff filed this action against Macclesfield and Empire Comfort Systems, Inc. (Empire) to recover for injuries Plaintiff sustained as a result of carbon monoxide exposure. Plaintiff contended a gas heater in his home emitted the carbon monoxide. Both Macclesfield and Empire moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Empire, but denied summary judgment in favor of Macclesfield. Both Plaintiff and Macclesfield appeal the grant of summary judgment in favor of Empire, and Macclesfield appeals the denial of its motion for summary judgment.

Plaintiff testified that on 5 March 2002, he and his wife noticed that the front of a heater in their home was “black, sooty, [and] smut-ted” and was burning a yellow flame with a black tip. The following day, Plaintiff requested that Macclesfield service the heater. Michael Batts (Batts), an employee of Macclesfield, serviced the heater at Plaintiffs home on 7 March 2002. Plaintiff testified that Batts took part of the heater out to Batts’s van, then returned to the house and put the heater back together. Plaintiff said he cleaned the bricks surrounding the heater and the glass at the front of the heater while Batts was putting the heater back together. Batts stated that the heater was “fixed” and turned the heater back on for approximately ten seconds. Plaintiff asked if there was any way to check the heater, and Batts said Macclesfield had a carbon monoxide detector, but that Macclesfield only used it on tobacco barns. According to Plaintiff, after servicing the heater, Batts did not light the flame for long enough to observe the color of the flame.

Batts testified that upon arrival at Plaintiff’s house, Batts noticed the heater was producing a yellow flame. Batts removed the burner and “blew it out” with compressed nitrogen. Batts said he then replaced the burner, lit it, and observed the flame for approximately fifteen minutes. After Batts observed the flame burning blue, he left Plaintiff’s house.

*384 Plaintiff testified that sometime during the night of 7 March 2002, or in the early morning hours of 8 March 2002, he and his wife woke up with severe headaches and nausea. They awakened their daughters and immediately left the house. Plaintiff saw that the heater was still burning and went back inside the house to turn it off. While doing so, he saw that the heater was as black as it had been before Batts’s service. One of Plaintiffs daughters passed out on the front porch, and then she vomited in front of the house. Plaintiff decided to drive his family to the hospital instead of waiting for an ambulance. Plaintiff drove to Heritage Hospital in Tarboro, where the family was diagnosed with carbon monoxide poisoning. The family was transported to Duke Hospital, where they were found to be asymptomatic. Each member of the family underwent a 155-minute hyperbaric chamber treatment at Duke and was discharged.

Plaintiff called Macclesfield on 11 March 2002 and requested that Batts return to Plaintiffs home to re-inspect the heater. Plaintiff testified that Batts turned the heater on and after about thirty seconds, the heater turned off. When Batts turned the heater on again, it did not turn off, and Plaintiffs newly-installed carbon monoxide sensors registered increasing carbon monoxide readings. Plaintiff saw Batts grab his throat and leave the house coughing. Batts removed the heater and replaced it with a new heater the following day.

According to Batts, when he returned to Plaintiffs home and turned the heater on, the flame burned blue for a few minutes and then “got kind of lazy looking[.]” The heater automatically shut off. Batts removed the heater from Plaintiffs house and took it to Macclesfield’s premises the following day. Plaintiff retrieved the heater from Macclesfield sometime during the next week. Plaintiff testified that when he regained possession of the heater, it had been thoroughly cleaned.

David McCandless (McCandless), an engineer with Accident Reconstruction Analysis, Inc., examined the heater in April 2002. The heater was located in Plaintiff’s living room and was no longer hooked up. McCandless performed a “cursory overall inspection” of the heater and discovered that the radiants were out of place, but nothing else appeared unusual. McCandless checked the gas system in the house and concluded that the pressure going into the house was proper for the liquified petroleum appliances. He also checked the vent system and the chimney and determined they were not blocked. He also examined the stove and found that it was operating properly. McCandless noted that the chimney was not taller *385 than the surrounding structure, as required by the building codes then in effect.

McCandless testified that after further examination of the heater on 18 April 2002, he discovered “significant soot buildup” on the burner that contributed to a “lack of adequate air . . . into the burner assembly.” McCandless opined that inadequate combustion started the soot buildup in the burner. McCandless also discovered that “the draft hood was not fully sealed so that the combustion products instead of going in the draft hood and then up the flue were escaping the draft hood into the living space.” McCandless testified that if there was no combustion problem, no carbon monoxide would be produced, so the leak would not have caused any health hazard. McCandless testified that his inspection showed that the correct quantity of gas was going though the heater, the orifice size was correct, and the pressure was correct, but that there was not enough combustion air mixing with the gas in the burner. McCandless testified that an inadequate amount of air was mixing with the gas, but that the amount of air could be adjusted on the burner. He stated there was not a specific setting specified, but that at the time of an installation, the burner should be examined and the air flow adjusted to obtain the proper flame. “[0]nce you initially have the condition where you don’t have enough combustion air and you start leaving soot on the burner and your burner starts getting dirty ... it only gets worse until the problem is corrected.” McCandless testified that after service on a heater and reinstallation of the burner, the air setting would have to be reset to ensure proper combustion. When a flame is burning properly, it would be a “blue flame with a well-defined inner cone in the flame.”

McCandless also found “some deformation of the combustion chamber that prevented the gasket from sealing properly on the face of it.” McCandless opined that this deformation would result from the combustion chamber repeatedly heating up during use. The front cover of the heater would have to be removed to see this deformation.

McCandless also testified that the heater contained a “thermal switch” which would operate to shut the heater off if all of the combustion gas was going into the home instead of into the chimney. The switch was tested and found to operate normally.

McCandless stated that when he examined the heater, he did not see an air shutter bracket installed on it, although the owner’s manual *386 required that such a bracket be installed on the unit. The air shutter bracket “could affect” the amount of air that went into the mixture to be combusted, but that it was also there to regulate the velocity of the burning process.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
642 S.E.2d 265, 182 N.C. App. 381, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmondson-v-macclesfield-lp-gas-co-inc-ncctapp-2007.