Ellsworth v. Tedesco

93 So. 2d 339, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 691
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 2, 1957
DocketNo. 20742
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 93 So. 2d 339 (Ellsworth v. Tedesco) 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
Ellsworth v. Tedesco, 93 So. 2d 339, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 691 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

This litigation results from a tragic occurrence in a very small bathroom in which four young children were in some manner rendered unconscious, three recovering with little or no harmful results but the youngest, a girl of about two years of age, drowning in water in the bathtub.

The suit was brought against C. J. Tedesco, the landlord from whom the premises were rented, and against American Fire and Casualty Company, his insurer.

The charges are that the gas water heater in the bathroom was defective in at least three particulars, with the result that gas escaped into the room or that, because of the defective venting of the heater, the children were overcome by fumes of the burning gas, and the smallest of the children either was overcome in the tub and drowned, or was first overcome and then fell into the tub.

Henry Dunn, the father, and Elsie Dunn, the mother, who are separated, brought this suit for the loss sustained by each in the death of the daughter, and Henry Dunn, the father suing for the use and benefit of each of the three who survived, claimed on behalf of each the damage which each had suffered.

The defendants admitted that there was in existence a liability insurance policy issued by the defendant insurer with a limit of $5,000 for the damage sustained by any one person and a limit of $10,000 to all persons who might be injured in any one occurrence.

The defendants denied that there were any defects in the heater, and averred [341]*341•that the accident was caused by the fact that the four young children locked themselves in the very small room with the heat•er burning and were overcome by the heat .and humidity and carbon monoxide which resulted from the burning of the heater for too long a time with so many persons in such a small room. Defendants also •charged in the alternative that there was •contributory negligence in the mother who was in charge of the children in permitting the four children to enter the small 'bathroom at the same time with the hot water running and the heater burning and with the window and the door shut.

The Board of Administrators of 'Charity Hospital of Louisiana at New Orleans intervened and prayed that, in the event liability be found in defendants, there be judgment in favor of the said intervener for the cost of the hospital services made necessary by the accident.

There was judgment in favor of the father, Henry .Dunn, for the use and benefit of each of the three surviving children in the sum of $200 each, and there was further judgment dismissing the suit of the father and of the mother. In the judgment no mention was made of the claim of the intervener.

The mother and the father appealed from the judgment in so far as it dismissed their claims, but the father did not appeal on behalf of the three surviving children in an effort to have the amounts awarded to each of them increased.

Counsel for defendants, erroneously believing that the father had appealed on behalf of the three surviving children, filed what is termed an answer to the appeal and prayed that the judgments in favor of those surviving children be reversed and that their claims be dismissed. When it was called to the attention of counsel for defendants that there had been no appeal on behalf of the surviving children and that consequently the answer to the appeal could have no effect, they readily acknowledged that those judgments were final and could not be reversed. Consequently, there remains only the question of whether there is liability in defendants for the death of the youngest child.

In his reasons for judgment the District Judge found that the hot water heater was defective. He said:

“The hot water heater in this case was defective. As a result thereof the minor children, Henry Dunn, Jr., Roy Dunn and Marilyn Dunn, were asphyxiated and are entitled to damages.
“The death of the minor child, Carol Dunn, was caused by drowning. Whether this child became unconscious as a result of inhaling fumes from the defective gas heater before her death by drowning, or drowned before she inhaled a sufficient amount of these fumes to become unconscious, is uncertain. Either conjecture is plausible. This Court cannot decide the case on the basis of possibilities or even probabilities. The burden of proof is on plaintiff to establish with reasonable certainty the cause of death.”

It is the contention of plaintiffs that the heater was defective in at least three particulars. It was of the instantaneous coil type in which a pilot light is, or should be, constantly burning. The large burner, which is under the coils through which the water passes, is automatically turned on when any hot water faucet is opened and, as the gas enters the large burner, it is ignited by the constantly burning pilot light. In modern heaters — this was a 1918 model — there is an automatic cutoff valve on the gas line which shuts off the main gas supply whenever the pilot light is extinguished, so that if the said pilot light is thus accidentally extinguished, gas cannot enter the large burner and will not escape into the room. .Such a safety valve is required by tthe building code and associated regulations of the City of New [342]*342Orleans and it is shown that there was no such valve on this heater.

The building code regulations also require that in each water heater there be either a built in down draft diverter, or that there be one in the vent pipe above the heater. Such a down draft diverter is intended to have the effect of preventing the extinguishing of the flame of the burner by wind or down draft coming down the vent. Whether this heater was so equipped we shall discuss later.

It is also claimed by plaintiff that there was no cover or wind deflecting cap on the top of the vent pipe which extended above the roof of the building and through which vent the burned gases of the heater are permitted to escape into the outer air. The purpose of such a cap or wind deflector is to prevent rain from falling down the vent into the heater and to assist in preventing a down draft from extinguishing the flame of the burner. Whether this heater was so equipped we shall discuss later.

The exact size of the heater is not shown, but it appears that it was located in the very small bathroom in the half of the double cottage which was occupied by the mother and some of the children and that, though located on that side, it served to furnish hot water to the other side of the double cottage as well, so that whenever a hot water faucet was turned on on either side, the heater would be started.

The size of the room is referred to as being approximately four feet in width. However, the exact measurements are shown to have been 45 inches in width, 11 feet in length and 7 feet from the floor to the ceiling. In this room the.re was one window and one door and apparently no other openings though it does appear that the door did not fit its opening well and that there thus remained, even when the door was closed, cracks which afforded a total opening of about 36 square inches.

The mother is a deaf mute and no evidence could be obtained from her, though it is shown that she sent the four children into the bathroom to bathe together as was the custom. Sometime later, though how much later we cannot ascertain, the mother became alarmed and attempted to enter the room.

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Related

Latham v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.
377 So. 2d 350 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1979)
Long v. McMichael
219 So. 2d 810 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)
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Davilla v. Richardson
120 So. 2d 293 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)
Ellsworth v. Tedesco
105 So. 2d 264 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
93 So. 2d 339, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellsworth-v-tedesco-lactapp-1957.