Geismar v. General Gas Corp.

182 So. 2d 769, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5495
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1966
DocketNo. 6560
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 182 So. 2d 769 (Geismar v. General Gas Corp.) 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
Geismar v. General Gas Corp., 182 So. 2d 769, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5495 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

BAILES, Judge.

The plaintiff brought this tort action against General Gas Corporation, and its public liability insurer, Hartford Accident .& [771]*771Indemnity Company, to recover damages sustained by him when his home and the contents thereof were destroyed by fire on May 28, 1957. The original plaintiff died during the pendency of this litigation in the lower court. On proper motion in the trial ■court, his residuary legatees were substituted as party-plaintiffs.

The damages claimed by the plaintiff were itemized in his petition as $50,000 for the value of his home; $22,757.55 for the contents of his home; and $12,500 for loss of use, mental anguish, suffering and worry occasioned by the fire and replacement of his home and contents. The total amount sued for was $85,257.55.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the substituted plaintiffs and against both defendants, in solido, for the sum of $55,379.07, with legal interest from date of judicial demand until paid. From this adverse judgment, the defendants appealed.

For a cause of action, plaintiff alleged that General Gas Corporation was engaged in the business of handling, selling and supplying butane gas, and the selling, installing and servicing of butane gas equipment; that he was a customer of defendant gas company; that it regularly supplied butane gas to him as well as regularly serviced all of his equipment which had been previously bought from defendant gas company; that the defendant gas company, acting through one or more of its employees, regularly checked the level of gas in his two tanks, and if gas was needed, the defendant gas company filled the low tank and transferred service from the low tank to the full tank; and plaintiff’s petition further alleged:

“5.
“That on May 28, 1957, one of the employees of said General Gas Corporation came to plaintiff’s home during the morning, while plaintiff was out of town, on one of his periodic stops, checked the gas level, found same to be low in one tank, and proceeded to change over the gas supply to the full tank, preparatory to filling the tank that was low.
“6.
“That prior to the arrival of the General Gas employee, plaintiff’s butane tanks and equipment were functioning properly and no gas was leaking or escaping.
“7.
“That while the employee of General Gas Corporation was servicing the butane tanks and equipment of plaintiff and acting in the course and scope of his employment, in some manner he permitted gas to escape and to continue to escape from the tank and its supply lines in such quantity and in such force that the gas went under, into and around plaintiff’s home in considerable volume and quantity and was allowed to continue to escape by said employee as ■aforesaid so as to finally cause an explosion and fire.
“8.
“That the aforesaid fire was apparently brought under control and extinguished ; that, however, during the afternoon of May 28, 1957, after the General Gas Corporation and its employees, acting in the course and scope of their employment, that were called to the scene had departed, fire again became apparent or again broke out in plaintiff’s home, completely destroying the home and contents.
“9.
“That all of the facts and circumstances surrounding said explosion and fires are exclusively within, the knowledge and control of defendants; that at all times prior and subsequent to said explosion and fires, the butane tanks, equipment and gas of plaintiff were exclusively within the control and under the supervision of defendant General Gas Corporation and its employees; [772]*772that said explosion and fires are of a kind that do not occur without negligence; that plaintiff specifically pleas (sic) that the doctrine of Res Ipsa Lo-quitur is applicable herein.
“10.
“That in the alternative, both fires were the direct result of the negligence of defendant’s employees in allowing the gas to escape from the butane tank, and in failing to take proper steps to protect the property of plaintiff after the gas was permitted to escape, and in failing to shut off the escaping gas after it started escaping.
“11.
“That in the alternative, the employees of General Gas Corporation failed to make sure that the original fire, caused by their negligence, as aforesaid, had been completely extinguished.
“12.
“That in the alternative, the employees of General Gas Corporation, knowing the properties of butane gas and of the fact that it will accumulate in walls, pockets and other places in buildings, failed to make sure that all of the gas which was negligently allowed escape, was completely removed from plaintiff’s home.”

Defendants’ answer consisted primarily of a denial of all of the acts of negligence attributed to the employees of General Gas Corporation in plaintiff’s petition quoted supra. Defendants affirmatively alleged that the explosion and fires were caused by a defective valve located on the tank owned by plaintiff. Defendants denied that General Gas Corporation performed any service whatever on the plaintiff’s butane gas equipment except on call and by order of the plaintiff. Alternatively, the defendants pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. As this plea of contributory negligence does not figure in this opinion, we will not further allude to it herein.

During the trial of this case, it was stipulated between plaintiff and defendants that General Gas Corporation performed no service whatever on the plaintiff’s gas equipment except on special request of the plaintiff to perform a particular service, and that plaintiff paid for that service on each occasion. Therefore, this contention of the plaintiff, as alleged in his petition, passes out of any consideration in the case.

While there is some conflict in the testimony as to the exact sequence of action of Mr. Earl J. Dupuy, the gas deliveryman in the employ of defendant, General Gas Corporation, we do not find a resolution of this conflict crucial to a determination of the issue before us. We will resolve the conflict, however, infra, in discussing this witness’ testimony.

We find the following facts : For a number of years prior to the occurrence of this accident, plaintiff had puchased his butane gas and required equipment from General Gas Corporation. It was mutually agreeable for the deliveryman to make deliveries of gas to the plaintiff’s tanks in the absence of the plaintiff. Therefore, there was nothing unusual about the delivery of the butane gas on the morning of May 28, 1957, in the absence of the plaintiff from his residence. On this particular occasion, plaintiff, accompanied by his housekeeper and another employee, was in New Orleans for the day.

On a routine call to the Geismar community on this date, Earl J. Dupuy, a duly licensed butane gas deliveryman in the employ of General Gas Corporation called at the residence of the plaintiff for the purpose of ascertaining whether plaintiff needed any gas. On examination of the proper indicator located in the dome of the underground gas storage tank, Mr.

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182 So. 2d 769, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geismar-v-general-gas-corp-lactapp-1966.