Gross v. Nashville Gas Co.

608 S.W.2d 860, 1980 Tenn. App. LEXIS 398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 29, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 608 S.W.2d 860 (Gross v. Nashville Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. Nashville Gas Co., 608 S.W.2d 860, 1980 Tenn. App. LEXIS 398 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinions

OPINION

DROWOTA, Judge.

In this appeal from an adverse judgment in a personal injury action, plaintiffs-appellants John M. Gross and Wayne Adair challenge the trial court’s decisions on the admissibility of certain evidence and on certain jury instructions and urge this Court to judicially adopt the doctrine of comparative negligence for the State of Tennessee.

Appellants filed suit in this case to recover damages for injuries sustained when a fire broke out in a manhole where they were working as employees of South Central Bell Telephone Company, splicing a telephone cable with an acetylene torch. Appellants contended the fire resulted from the combustion of natural gas which had leaked into the manhole. Appellants sued appellee Nashville Gas Company for $50,-000.00 compensatory damages for John M. Gross and $150,000.00 compensatory damages for Wayne Adair. Prior to trial of this case, appellants amended their complaint, claiming compensatory damages of $65,-000.00 for Gross and $275,000.00 for Adair, and claiming in addition $250,000.00 punitive damages against appellee.

The substance of appellants’ complaint as amended was that the appellee, which maintains and operates a system of underground gas lines below the City of Nashville, was negligent in maintaining its underground gas distribution system in such a manner that gas leaked into the manhole in which the appellants were working and caused the fire which injured them. Specifically, the complaint as amended charged that the appellee was negligent in failing to regularly inspect its gas lines; in failing to utilize the most reliable and effective method and equipment for locating gas leaks in its lines; in failing to replace corroded gas lines which it knew or should have known were corroded to the point of leaking; in failing to subscribe to safety standards and codes; and in failing to maintain its lines in such a manner that natural gas could escape from its lines into places where people could or could be expected to congregate. Appellants further alleged that maintenance and storage of gas below the City of Nashville was an ultrahazardous activity and that therefore the appellee was strictly liable for failing to properly safeguard against the escape of gas from its underground pipe system; that the natural gas which injured the appellants was an instrumentality under the exclusive management and control of the appellee and that the event which injured the appellants was such that in the ordinary course of events it would not have happened if the appellee had used proper care; that appellants’ injuries were a direct and proximate result of the appellee’s acts and omissions; and that the acts of negligence enumerated in the complaint as amended constituted gross and wanton negligence, entitling appellants to punitive as well as compensatory damages.

[863]*863Appellee in its answer to appellants’ amended complaint denied all liability and as additional defenses asserted that appellants were guilty of negligence which was proximate, gross and contributory in that they failed to follow safety precautions, with which they were familiar, regarding work in manholes; that a proximate cause of the accident was the failure or refusal of South Central Bell Telephone Company to supervise appellants properly; that by the above acts and omissions, appellants and South Central Bell had assumed the risk of injury; and that from appellee’s standpoint, appellants’ injuries resulted from a misadventure or unavoidable accident.

Based upon the defenses regarding South Central Bell’s responsibility for the injuries, and also based upon South Central Bell’s notification of the gas company regarding its subrogation interest arising because of worker’s compensation payments it, as a self insured company, had made to appellants, appellee filed motions to join South Central Bell as an involuntary plaintiff. These motions were denied.

A jury trial was held in the Sixth Circuit Court of Davidson County on January 2-5 and 8-12, 1979. The trial court directed a verdict in favor of appellee on the issue of punitive damages. The jury found both appellee and appellants negligent and on this basis returned a verdict in favor of appellee. Judgment was entered on the verdict and the cause dismissed.

Appellants’ motion for a new trial was denied, but their motion to file an amended complaint including the theory of comparative negligence was granted.

In their appeal to this Court appellants present eight issues for review. Two of these; have to do with the trial court’s rulings on the admissibility of certain evidence; appellants assert that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence certain safety practices or standards of South Central Bell and that it erred in refusing to admit certain photographs of exposed high pressure gas lines belonging to appellee. Appellants also argue that the trial court was in error in failing to charge the jury with five of their special requests for jury instruction, namely, those dealing with remote contributory negligence, strict liability, the duty of care required of a gas company, gross negligence, and punitive damages. Finally, appellants argue that Tennessee, through this Court, should judicially adopt the doctrine of comparative negligence.

FACTS

In November of 1975, John Gross and Wayne Adair were employed as cable splicers by South Central Bell Telephone Company. Gross had worked for the telephone company approximately seven years and Adair six years. As part of their job, both men had received training in South Central Bell safety practices for working in manholes.

On Monday, November 10, 1975, Gross and Adair were scheduled to work the midnight to 8:00 a. m. shift. They had been working this same shift for much of the preceding week, during which time their task had been to splice an underground telephone cable at the intersection of Randy Road and “old” Old Hickory Boulevard in Madison, Tennessee. After reporting at midnight on November 10 to the telephone company’s Ambrose Avenue work center to pick up their truck, tools and equipment, Gross and Adair proceeded to the work location, arriving at about 1:00 a. m. Gross drove his own vehicle to the location.

Before entering the manhole where they were doing their work, Adair tested for combustible gas by dropping the hose of the company’s “explosive meter” or “sniffer” into the manhole, siphoning air through the hose with an aspirator bulb, and taking a meter reading. No combustible gas was detected. Approximately one foot of water standing in the floor of the hole was pumped out, leaving one or two inches of water on the floor. Adair then dropped a large “blower hose” which was connected to a power blower or fan into the manhole, and Gross and Adair entered the hole. Neither Adair nor Gross could later remember how the hose was positioned in the manhole [864]*864nor which of them had positioned it, but both thought that it must have been properly angled toward the side of the manhole rather than hanging straight down, because otherwise it would have been hard for them to do their work.

A duct on the west wall of the manhole was unplugged when the men entered the hole, and Gross unplugged or “gouged” another duct in the east wall with a pair of scissors, to relieve water pressure building up behind the duct, he said. Neither Adair nor Gross tested for the presence of gas at the duct entrances, nor did they test at all for gas in the manhole after entering it.

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Gross v. Nashville Gas Co.
608 S.W.2d 860 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
608 S.W.2d 860, 1980 Tenn. App. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-nashville-gas-co-tennctapp-1980.