Henrikson v. Herrin Transfer & Warehouse Co.

43 So. 2d 471, 216 La. 199, 1949 La. LEXIS 1038
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 7, 1949
DocketNo. 39020.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 So. 2d 471 (Henrikson v. Herrin Transfer & Warehouse Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henrikson v. Herrin Transfer & Warehouse Co., 43 So. 2d 471, 216 La. 199, 1949 La. LEXIS 1038 (La. 1949).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

For the destruction by fire on February 13, 1945, of her dwelling house, together with certain furnishings and household goods, plaintiff, Mrs. Pearl B. Henrikson (now wife of Clarence Ford), claims in this suit damages of $18,062.55 from Herrin Transfer & Warehouse Company, Inc., a Louisiana corporation engaged in a general trucking, hauling and storage business.

The petition charges that the fire was occasioned by the carelessness and negligence of defendant’s employees while attempting to disconnect a kitchen range (from a butane system) in the course of their removing the contents of her residence with the view of storing them in the warehouse of the defendant at Shreveport.

Plaintiff sues individually and for the use and benefit of three insurers (American Central Insurance Company, Home Insurance Company and National Surety Marine Insurance Corporation) which paid portions of the above mentioned claim and were subrogated to the extent of the payments.

Defendant denies that its employees were in any manner negligent, and it avers that the fire and loss occurred solely from plaintiff’s negligence. Alternatively defendant specially pleads contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff.

After trial of the merits there was judgment rejecting the demands of plaintiff. The trial judge concluded, as stated in the brief of plaintiff’s counsel (no written reasons for judgment are in the record), that plaintiff was contributorily negligent and therefore could not recover. This appeal followed.

*203 For sometime prior to February 13, 1945, the record discloses, plaintiff and her infant daughter lived in the 'residence in question which was situated on a large tract of ground in a rural section of Webster Parish. Having contracted to sell the property, and in order to give possession thereof to the purchaser, she arranged with defendant to effect a removal from the premises of most of her furnishings and household goods and to store them in its warehouse. Pursuant to the arrangement defendant sent three of its employees (all colored), together with two trucks, to the property on the mentioned date, two of the men arriving there early in the morning and the other about noon. Since some of the furnishings had been sold along with the house, and were to remain, it was necessary for plaintiff to point out to defendant’s employees from time to time (and she did) the various items that were to be packed for storage and removed. In keeping with their usual practice the men proceeded first to handle principally the articles in the bedrooms and living room, leaving for final removal the heavy equipment in the kitchen.

Late in the afternoon of the same day (about five o’clock), after most of the movables had been carried from the house and placed in the trucks, attention was directed to the kitchen furnishings, including a large cooking range designed to burn butane gas. This range, as well as numerous heaters throughout the dwelling (including two hot water heaters), was connected with a main supply line that led to two separate tanks of butane gas (one larger than the other) located some distance from the house and almost wholly buried, the smaller being within the enclosed rear yard and the larger outside or beyond a plank fence. There was no master valve on the main supply line by which the flow of gas from both tanks could be stopped; instead, each tank was fitted with a separate cut-off valve.

Preparatory to the disconnecting of the kitchen range and its removal, two of the men and the plaintiff went together outside and closed the valve on the smaller tank. They failed, however, to take the same precaution as to the larger tank. According to plaintiff the reason for the failure was that they could not find the •larger tank’s cut-off valve; the workmen, on the other hand, testified that they did not know of the existence of a second tank.

Be that as it may all parties, on their return to the kitchen, were fully aware that the flow of gas into the main supply line and to the range had not been stopped. Notwithstanding this knowledge the workmen, with the encouragement and approval of plaintiff, set about to remove from the rigid supply line the range’s flexible copper connection and to substitute therefor one of two caps which plaintiff had given them prior to her going into a bedroom. During this operation, following the dis *205 connection and while the substituting was being attempted, escaping gas became ignited, resulting in the throwing of a large flame up and along the kitchen wall and the setting fire to the dwelling. All efforts to extinguish the blaze with a garden hose were without avail. While the house was burning, however, a few additional articles of furniture and some of plaintiff’s personal effects were removed. Also, the nearly loaded trucks and plaintiff’s station wagon were driven to a place of safety.

That which ignited the gas, the evidence preponderately shows, was the pilot light of a hot water heater located in the kitchen only five and one-half feet from the1 disconnected line. All three of defendant’s workmen testified positively to this fact. They stated that the blaze started at the hot water heater and traveled suddenly to the uncapped pipe. And corroborative of their testimony is the proven circum.stance that butane gas escaping in a room, being much heavier than air, has a tendency to settle to and remain along the floor, near which the pilot light of a hot water heater is located. Moreover, no other cause for the ignition is indicated or even suggested by the record.

True, plaintiff testified that she extinguished the pilot light at least an hour before the disconnecting of the stove began (defendant’s employees stated that she sought to do so immediately prior to their commencing); but, without impugning her good intention, we are satisfied that she is mistaken as to that accomplishment. Her testimony is that in extinguishing the pilot light (as well as the main burner) she used a cut-off located on the supply pipe between the bottom of the heater and the floor; the fact is, however, that there was no cut-off there. An examination of the heater, made by a butane installation expert following the fire, disclosed that the only cut-off it had was attached to the side about twelve inches above its bottom and eighteen inches from the floor. This expert explained that the cut-off was of disc type; that when turned part way the main burner was closed; and when fully turned the pilot light was. also shut off. What plaintiff did, obviously, was to turn the disc type cut-off- only part way, thereby closing the main burner but leaving the pilot lighted. And we might add that her confusion as to the location of the cut-off is easily understandable, for another hot water heater in the bathroom of her dwelling, according to the record, had a cut-off located as stated by her.

To our minds defendant’s employees, as charged by plaintiff, were careless and negligent in their operation respecting the removal of the kitchen range, for at the time they were fully aware that the gas supply to the various units in the house, including those in the kitchen, was not shut off; and it is common knowledge that the disconnecting of a gas stove under those circumstances (especially one using butane gas which is more inflammable than *207

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Bluebook (online)
43 So. 2d 471, 216 La. 199, 1949 La. LEXIS 1038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henrikson-v-herrin-transfer-warehouse-co-la-1949.