Gill v. Eakin

33 So. 2d 821, 203 Miss. 204, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 251
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1948
DocketNo. 36678.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 So. 2d 821 (Gill v. Eakin) 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
Gill v. Eakin, 33 So. 2d 821, 203 Miss. 204, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 251 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

L. A. Smith, Sr., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A jury in the Circuit Court of Humphreys County awarded appellee a verdict against appellant, which was as follows: “We, the jury, find in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $10,000 actual damages, and $5,000 punitive damages.” This verdict was returned by the jury in an action whereby appellee sought to recover from appellant $75,000 actual damages, and $10,000 punitive damages, alleged to have accrued to the plaintiff “by reason of a ■butane gas explosion -caused by the defendant’s gross negligence tantamount to willfulness in installing and con *208 necting a butane gas system in tbe borne occupied by tbe plaintiff and resulting in tbe serious and permanent injury of tbe plaintiff and tbe injury and death of bis wife. ’ ’

Appellant brought tbe case here on direct appeal, presenting and arguing two assignments of error. Tbe first is, that he should have been granted a directed verdict; tbe second, that tbe court erred in permitting tbe award of $5,000 punitive damages to stand, over bis objections and protests. No point was raised in tbe court below as to tbe form of tbe verdict, or here. We therefore do not discuss it. Our only purpose in setting it out in full is to demonstrate bow the division in damages is revealed in tbe record. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. Tbe trial court denied a motion by appellee for a new trial on tbe complaint that tbe verdict as to compensatory damages was inadequate, and accordingly be seeks reversal of that portion of tbe verdict.

Appellee, aged thirty-three, and bis wife, aged thirty, bad been happily married for approximately nine years, and at tbe time of tbe tragic event in this case, were harmoniously and contentedly residing with appellee’s father, J. W. Eakin, in tbe latter’s one-story frame home on bis farm in Holmes County. Appellee and bis wife bad no children, and, of course, appellee became her sole heir at her death, occurring as set out, post. Apparently, to gratify tbe wishes of bis son and daughter-in-law, J. W. Eakin consented to install a system of beating by tbe use of butane gas, and, for that purpose, entered into a contract with appellant, Gill, to furnish tbe necessary equipment, install and connect tbe system.

Sufficient equipment was not then available to complete tbe installation and connection of tbe entire system. Tbe deficiency was in beaters. Their lack caused certain risers, or pipes, leading from tbe storage tank outdoors and coming into tbe bouse through tbe floors of tbe vari-, ous rooms, to which tbe beaters were later to be attached when available, to require sealing against leakage in the meantime. One of such risers was in a small unoccupied *209 room opening into the bed chamber of J. W. Eakin, and in the latter there was a lighted heater on the morning of the explosion. The agents and employees of appellant had left the afternoon of February 14, 1946, their work, apparently finished except as to the postponed connection of heaters with the unattached risers. When Mrs. Merrill Eakin opened the closed door of the little room about 7 o’clock of the following morning, the residence was practically blown apart in the affected portions, due to the explosion of gas seepage from the riser in the small room; permeating the air in the adjoining bedroom; and there coming into contact with the lighted heater.

Appellee’s wife was horribly burned and injured, and, after lingering in great mental anguish and physical agony for approximately fifteen hours, she died at a hospital in a nearby town. Appellee also was badly burned and hurt, suffered excruciatingly, and was hospitalized. He was in a circulatory collapse; suffered third degree burns of the upper trunk, the hands, knees and ears; and his fingernails were burned away. He remained in the hospital six weeks, and for awhile continued to receive treatment after his discharge. He was, he testified (and was corroborated by his doctor), permanently disabled. The appellee paid total expenses for hospital, medical, and doctors’ services, of $3,025.69. For all of these elements of damages, the jury awarded him $10,000 as .compensation. Subtracting from this ''amount the above expenditures by appellee, he was awarded for the suffering of himself and wife, her death, and his permanent injury, the exact sum of $6,974.31.

The injuries and damage were proximately caused, according to appellee, and this the jury accepted to be true, by the negligence of appellant in failing to seal completely the riser in the small room, from which the gas allegedly escaped and exploded when it made contact with the lighted heater, as stated, supra.

■ On the other hand, the appellant contends that, although she was warned of the danger of so doing, the wife *210 .of appellee tampered in some unexplained way with a valve sealing the riser in the small room, and that she thus caused the escape of the gas and the resultant explosion with the consequent injuries and damage, for none of which he was to blame or responsible. In his brief, appellant says: ‘ ‘ The explosion involved here was caused solely by the misdirected zeal and persistency of plaintiff’s wife in suspecting and searching for a gas leak after she smelled the paint burning off the new appliance in her home.” The jury rejected this view, and we are unable to find any evidence in the record that Mrs. Merrill Eakin touched this riser or valve at any time.

There was much testimony on both sides, which was generally in' sharp conflict, resulting in the verdict of the jury as set out, ante. Since we cannot say that the verdict, in so far as it fastened liability upon the appellant for compensatory damages is concerned, was manifestly wrong or against the great overwhelming weight of the evidence, we are in no position to disturb it, as to such liability.

Appellant points out that no instruction was asked or given on the subject of punitive damages, and that the award thereof was by the mere volition of the jury. No objection as to the form of the verdict is raised, as stated supra, but appellant contends, and, from the record before us, correctly so, we think, that no award of exemplary damages should have been made, as no such gross negligence was shown as to merit such punishment. We think this assignment of error should be sustained, and it is, on the proof before us. The general rule seems to be that “In an action against a gas company for damages resulting from its negligence, if there are no circumstances ofspecial aggravation, the extent of plaintiff’s remuneration is restricted to such damages as are the legal and natural consequences of defendant’s wrong. 38 C. J. S., Gas, Sec. 48. See also Mississippi Power Co. v. Byrd, 160 Miss. 71, 133 So. 193, and authorities there cited. In Bounds et al. v. Watts, 159 Miss. 307, 131 So. 804, 805, we said: “The *211

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ries v. Sanders
34 F.R.D. 468 (N.D. Mississippi, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 So. 2d 821, 203 Miss. 204, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-eakin-miss-1948.