Henley v. Nu-Gas Co.

271 N.E.2d 741, 149 Ind. App. 307, 1971 Ind. App. LEXIS 413
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 3, 1971
Docket1269A251
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 271 N.E.2d 741 (Henley v. Nu-Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henley v. Nu-Gas Co., 271 N.E.2d 741, 149 Ind. App. 307, 1971 Ind. App. LEXIS 413 (Ind. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Lowdermilk, J.

This is an action wherein the plaintiffs-appellants were a man and wife and the Vernon Fire & Casualty Insurance Company was a subrogee under a fire policy issued to their co-plaintiffs on a house trailer which was damaged by fire.

Plaintiffs-appellants Henleys purchased a mobile home about three months prior to March 3, 1967, from a mobile home sales company in Washington, Indiana. The home was equipped with a gas water heater. The orifices on the burner and pilot light of the water heater were made to burn natural gas; however, only LP, or bottled gas was available at the mobile home park where the Henleys set their trailer in Washington, Indiana, and the Nu-Gas Co., Inc., of Petersburg, Indiana, was requested to and did furnish bottled gas and was further requested to convert the unit so it would burn bottled gas.

An employee of defendant-appellee, Nu-Gas Co., Inc., changed the orifice on the burner so that it would burn the bottled gas, but the pilot light orifice needed a special kit for the conversion. Defendant-appellee’s employee, Bell, notified Mr. Henley and also a Mr. Hayes, the owner of the trailer sales company, that the kit was needed and Mr. Hayes, as owner of the trailer sales company, ordered it.

Defendant-appellee drilled a hole in the orifice for the pilot light according to the instruction manual and adjusted the pilot light flame to the water heater so that it would burn slightly larger than the flame usually burned to operate the hot water heater until the conversion kit arrived.

The evidence disclosed that the flame from the pilot light *309 had to burn larger so as to effectively operate the shut-off control. The heat from the pilot light, besides igniting the main burner to the gas tank, heats the end of a line called a thermocouple. The heat on the end of this thermocouple causes five milliliter volts of electricity to be generated. The electricity so generated keeps a magnetic valve in the shut-off control open. If the pilot light does not heat the thermocouple the required electricity is not generated and the magnetic valve shuts off all gas to the burner and the pilot light.

The evidence was further that LP or bottled gas, burning through a natural gas orifice, does not create as hot a flame as through a bottled gas orifice and the flame must be turned up. The turning up of this flame creates a lazy flame, or a “floating” flame and not a steady blue flame, and a draft or wind permitted to come through the bottom of the trailer could cause the flame to float away from the thermocouple, and this unit would shut down.

The gas heater was first regulated for LP gas function, but went out about six times prior to a fire which burned the trailer. Plaintiff-appellant, Mr. Henley, re-lit the pilot light approximately three times and Mr. Bell from the defendantappellee corporation serviced the heater twice in the three months, besides being there another time to install a larger gas tank.

On March 3, 1967, Mr. Bell serviced the water heater in the afternoon. The compartment housing the water heater was attached to the trailer and could be entered from an outside door only. It was through this door that plaintiff-appellant Henley and defendant-appellee Nu-Gas Co., Inc., had access to the trailer when they lighted the burner and when repair work was done.

On March 3, 1967, at the time the repairman re-lighted the water heater he could see soot on the door of the water heater that was being built up there from a leak between the heater and its door. Soot had been seen at this place before. On prior occasions, it was necessary for two of defendant-appellee’s *310 employees to probe the soot out of the exhaust pipe which was designed to carry the fumes from the gas heater to open air.

After the pilot light was re-lighted on March 3, 1967, and the workman had left, Mr. Bell determined he had left a wrench at the trailer and after about an hour and a half, returned, opened the door and found the wrench and observed the water heater, as well as the pilot light, functioning properly.

It was after this that Mrs. Henley returned home, took a shower, using some hot water, and then at a time about three hours after Mr. Bell had last worked on the water heater the trailer caught fire.

The evidence was that the use of the water at the time it was used after the adjustment or repairs to the water heater was about an adequate time for the water heater to have had an intake of enough cold water for the water heater to automatically ignite itself.

Firemen were quickly at the scene of the blaze and they testified that most of the fire was coming up the wall between the water heater compartment and a bedroom where there was an electric fuse box for the trailer installed in the closet next to the water heater compartment, and in the fire.

The trailer was practically a total loss and the plaintiff-appellant Vernon Fire & Casualty Insurance Company, paid all of the coverage they had with the Henleys in full and were subrogated to their rights in that amount.

The complaint is brought on the theory of negligence and under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, and is in one paragraph. The issues were closed by the defendant-appellee filing answer thereto.

The trial was had to the court without a jury. The case was taken under advisement and after due consideration the judge, on July 10, 1969, found against the plaintiffs-appellants and for the defendant-appellee. Plaintiffs-appellants timely filed their motion for new trial, setting forth three specifica *311 tions of error, and waived two in their brief, leaving the only specification of error that of “The decision of the court is contrary to law.” The motion for new trial contained a well reasoned memorandum in support thereof, but it is not necessary that it be copied in this opinion and we shall discuss only the question raised and argued by plaintiffs-appellants.

The assignment of errors is that the court erred in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial.

A fireman witness, Mr. Embry, who was present at the fire, said he could not say the water heater started the fire.

Mr. Hayes, owner of the trailer court, stated the walls in the general area of the water heater were burned and the bathroom was gutted.

Another fireman testified that the electric fuse box was in the closet where the fire was.

Mr. Bell, a man with twenty-one years experience in the maintaining and repairing of water heaters in mobile homes, cleaned the flue from all soot, checked the pressure and orifice size and checked the pipe joints for leaks by soaping them. He cycled the heater through two cycles and found it performed correctly before he left on the day of the fire, and it was performing correctly when he returned an hour later for his wrench He was familiar with the odor of LP gas and smelled none at any time he was at the trailer.

He further testified that in his opinion neither the sooting condition nor the discolored area around the burner access door were fire hazards and he could see no way in which the water heater could have started the fire.

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Bluebook (online)
271 N.E.2d 741, 149 Ind. App. 307, 1971 Ind. App. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henley-v-nu-gas-co-indctapp-1971.