Entex, Inc. v. McGuire

414 So. 2d 437
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1982
Docket53067
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 414 So. 2d 437 (Entex, Inc. v. McGuire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Entex, Inc. v. McGuire, 414 So. 2d 437 (Mich. 1982).

Opinion

414 So.2d 437 (1982)

ENTEX, INC. and City of McComb, Miss.
v.
Ray McGUIRE and Leah Elizabeth McGuire.

No. 53067.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

June 2, 1982.

*438 Gillis, Walman & Gillis, Robert W. Brumfield, McComb, Brunini, Grantham, Grower & Hewes, Jefferson D. Stewart, Newt P. Harrison, Jackson, for appellants.

Mounger, Mounger & Mord, Tylertown, Keith Starrett, Magnolia, Mike Smith, McComb, for appellees.

Before SUGG, P.J., and ROY NOBLE LEE and HAWKINS, JJ.

ROY NOBLE LEE, Justice, for the Court:

Three (3) suits were filed by Ray McGuire and Leah Elizabeth McGuire, his wife, in the Circuit Court of Pike County, Honorable Joe N. Pigott, presiding, for personal injuries and property damage, against Entex, Inc. [Entex] and City of McComb [McComb]. The cases were consolidated for trial, verdicts were returned and judgments entered in behalf of Mrs. McGuire for eighty thousand dollars ($80,000), personal injuries; Mr. McGuire for thirty thousand *439 dollars ($30,000), personal injuries; and the McGuires jointly for fifty-five thousand dollars ($55,000), property damage. Entex and McComb have appealed from those judgments.

On January 17, 1979, McComb sent a crew of men to repair a ruptured underground water line located on Locust Street in front of appellees' home. Julius Conerly was in charge of the crew and arrived at the site with a backhoe shortly after 7:00 a.m. Conerly had begun to dig with the backhoe into the asphalt and soil underneath in an attempt to find the water leak, when he struck an object which "gave in" to the backhoe. Another workman jumped into the ditch and discovered that Conerly had hit a gas service line with the bucket of the backhoe. The service line, which led to the McGuire home, was bent in the shape of a downward "U", but the pipe had not been ruptured at that point. Conerly then turned the backhoe around and proceeded to dig in the opposite direction.

Mr. McGuire saw the city crew when it arrived and began to work in the street. He went to his garden and worked for a time and then walked back inside his home for a cup of coffee. After drinking the coffee he went back to the garden. According to McGuire, he first smelled a strong odor of gas between 8:00 and 8:15 a.m. He thought the city crew had hit a pocket of trapped gas in the street, but was not alarmed. When the odor remained, he went back into his home and cut off the pilot on his heating unit. Later, he went outside and checked the gas meter, which was located approximately two and one-half (2 1/2) feet from the front of the house near some bushes. The dials registering the inflow of gas did not move indicating no gas was flowing through the meter. He also saw the bushes moving near the ground and felt a strong rush of gas rising up from the surface.

McGuire went to the street where the city crew was digging and told Conerly that he had found a gas leak in front of his house. He told Conerly he thought the backhoe had struck a gas pipe. Conerly turned off the backhoe, examined the spot where the gas was rising up out of the ground, and asked McGuire to call the gas company and report the leak.[1] McGuire went back into his house and told Mrs. McGuire to telephone the gas company and report that the city crew had struck a gas pipe while digging in front of their home. Mrs. McGuire called the Entex office and reported the incident.

At this time the McGuires were not aware of the dangerous situation created by the escaping gas, thinking it was leaking outside their home. They went about their usual routines and Mr. McGuire began to walk back to his garden. Mrs. McGuire picked up a cigarette and, although she did not remember exactly what happened, apparently struck a match. Gas had become trapped in the house and the flame from the match ignited it causing an explosion. McGuire had walked fifteen (15) to twenty (20) feet from the house when it exploded. He turned and saw it engulfed in flames and heard his wife screaming for help. A huge gaping hole had been blown in the side of the house and Mr. McGuire helped his wife get outside before a second explosion occurred. A neighbor heard the explosion, saw the fire, and telephoned the fire department. At 9:06 a.m. a unit was dispatched to the scene, arriving at the McGuire property four (4) minutes later. When the fire truck arrived, the house had been totally destroyed by the fire.

The explosion occurred at approximately 9:05 a.m. Representatives of Entex arrived upon the scene at 9:26 a.m. and the service line was "squeezed off" approximately an hour after the explosion. Investigation by the City Fire Marshal indicated that the fire began in the rear bedroom, where the escaping natural gas had apparently collected, and quickly spread throughout the frame building.

*440 The gas meter serving the McGuire residence was set at the front of the house. The vertical pipe to which the meter was attached, commonly known as a riser pipe, was connected to the service line with a six-inch dresser coupling. It consisted of a metal sleeve with a threaded nut and gasket on each end and was installed by loosening the nuts and gaskets, slipping in the two pieces of pipe to be joined and then tightening the nuts and gaskets around the pipe. The dresser coupling was manufactured by Dresser Industries, Inc., and had been installed and used at the McGuire residence for approximately twenty-three (23) years without incident.

I.

Did the lower court err in declining to grant the motions of Entex for a directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict?

The declarations charged that Entex was negligent in that (1) it used a dresser coupling in its service line at the McGuire residence, (2) the gas service line was at a negligently shallow depth, (3) the gas line was installed over and across the city's water main, (4) Entex failed to mark the service line, (5) Entex failed to provide a map indicating the location of its service lines to the City of McComb, and (6) Entex was not immediately prepared to cut off the gas from its service line. In overruling the motion for a directed verdict, the lower court stated the following reasons in support thereof: (a) The explosion and fire occurred within sixteen (16) minutes after Mrs. McGuire called Entex, and it could have responded in about five (5) minutes even though it did not do so until thirty-six (36) minutes later; (b) Entex should have reasonably foreseen the accident might occur when it used the dresser coupling; (c) Entex failed to mark the gas distribution service lines; (d) Entex failed to furnish the city with copies of their map designating the locations of the distribution lines; and (e) Entex was negligent in laying the gas line over and across the water line.

At the request of the appellees, the lower court submitted issues of negligence to the jury in two instructions: (1) P-16, whether or not Entex failed to use due care to mark the existence of its lines when it should have reasonably foreseen that there would be digging or excavating in the street where the service line was located, and (2) P-31, whether or not Entex reasonably could have foreseen that there would be digging or excavation in the street and that, under those circumstances, the use of a dresser coupling was dangerous or hazardous.

Appellees contend that Entex was negligent because it used the dresser coupling to connect the feeder pipe and service line at a point only 2 1/2 feet from the McGuire house.

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414 So. 2d 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/entex-inc-v-mcguire-miss-1982.