Hutchison v. Pharris

158 S.W.3d 554, 2005 WL 32201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 2005
Docket02-03-006-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 158 S.W.3d 554 (Hutchison v. Pharris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchison v. Pharris, 158 S.W.3d 554, 2005 WL 32201 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

ANNE GARDNER, Justice.

INTRODUCTION

This suit involves the tragic deaths of two children resulting from a fire that also injured three adults and destroyed a mobile home. Appellants Leighia Hutchison, individually, as next friend of Jonathan Hutchison, and as representative of the estates of Cody and Elizabeth Hutchison; Laura Blevins; and Donny Drennon appeal from a take-nothing judgment in favor of Appellee Vincent Pharris d/b/a Murray & Massie Butane (Murray & Massie). Appellants raise three issues, complaining that (1) there is legally or factually insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that Blevins and Hutchison were contribu-torily negligent in causing the fire or deaths; (2) the jury’s failure to find negligence of Murray & Massie in connection with the mobile home’s propane tank is against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence; and (3) the jury’s failure to award damages to Appellants is against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence. 1

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. The Fire

At about 9:00 a.m. on March 9, 1994, a fire engulfed and totally destroyed a double-wide mobile home at Lake Arrowhead, Texas. Laura Blevins and her husband had bought the mobile home in 1992. Laura and her husband had separated, and she had lived in the mobile home for a little more than a year at the time of the fire. The propane tank and line were already hooked up when they bought the trailer. Blevins did not know who had previously serviced the tank. When they first bought the mobile home, she had called John’s Tractor & Propane to check and service the tank.

Murray & Massie first made an “out-of-gas” call to the residence on November 2, 1993. Its gas serviceman performed a mo-nometer or “leak” test of the regulator, made a visual exam, reconnected the line, and went into the house and lit the pilot lights after filling the tank. Everything checked out. Murray & Massie again provided propane service and filled the tank on November 2, 1993, December 6, 1993, January 5, 1994, and January 21, 1994. When Murray & Massie was not paid for those last three deliveries, it quit delivering gas. When Blevins once again ran out of gas in March, shortly before the fire, she called Calvin Gas Company for service. Calvin Gas was the last dealer to fill Blevins’s propane tank before the fire. Calvin Gas filled the tank a few days before the fire but did not inspect the system or light the pilot lights. 2

At the time of the fire, the mobile home was occupied by Blevins, her son Donny, her daughter Leighia Hutchison, and Hutchison’s three children. Cody was three years of age, Jonathan was eighteen months old, and Elizabeth was five months old. Blevins had turned on the burners of her kitchen stove to warm the home when she returned from work around 4:00 a.m. *557 There was no other heat, as the pilot lights to the furnaces had been unlit for several days.

Blevins had coffee and a couple of cigarettes and left the burners on when she retired to her bedroom after heating a bottle for her granddaughter, Elizabeth. Leighia awoke and took the three children into another bedroom to watch TV after the two boys had cereal. Donny was asleep in the third bedroom. Leighia went back to sleep with Elizabeth lying beside her as Jonathan and Cody left the bedroom, ostensibly to use the bathroom, shutting the bedroom door behind them. No one smelled gas.

Blevins heard the boys go into the kitchen. A few minutes later, Leighia heard Cody scream. Blevins came out of her bedroom and saw what she would later describe as a “fireball” above the stove that “swooshed” back toward the laundry room, knocking her down. The boys ran to Blevins, who crawled with Jonathan through thick smoke and heat to the front door and onto the porch. Cody ran back toward the bedroom, and she never saw him again. According to Blevins, an unidentified man drove up to the scene with his wife, who took Jonathan to safety while the man held Blevins back from re-entering the mobile home to find the other two children.

Blevins’s daughter, Leighia, testified that she awoke and opened the door to the hall, but it was filled with black smoke, so she went to the window and opened it, whereupon, she said, she was pulled through the window by Blevins and the same unidentified man, leaving five-month-old Elizabeth asleep next to the same window. Blevins’s son, Donny, awoke and opened his door to smoke and flames, with things falling down from the ceiling. He briefly saw Cody’s legs through the smoke, and then someone called Cody, who ran back the other direction. Donny broke a window with a chair and crawled through it. He did not try to re-enter the home as every room was on fire. Both Cody and Elizabeth died in the fire.

B. The Suit

Appellants originally sued the manufacturers of the mobile home and heating system and Calvin Gas Company for injuries suffered by the adults and wrongful death and survival actions for the death's of Cody and Elizabeth. Other defendants, including Murray & Massie, were later added to the suit. 3 After several claims were settled, the case ultimately proceeded to trial in September 2002 against Murray & Massie as the sole remaining defendant.

Appellants’ theory of liability against Murray & Massie at trial was that the propane tank’s regulator, which was more than fifteen years old, had “worn out” and failed, resulting in increased pressure on the furnace control valve, which in turn allowed propane gas to leak into the home and to get ignited by the stove burners. Appellants claimed Murray & Massie was negligent and violated the DTPA in breaching a warranty to perform services in a workmanlike manner and in failing to replace the regulator or advise Blevins that the regulator was more than fifteen years old.

Following a week-long trial, the jury returned a verdict answering broad-form jury question number one “yes” as to whether negligence of Leighia Hutchison and Laura Blevins was a proximate cause of the occurrence in question, and “no” as *558 to whether negligence of the furnace manufacturer, Calvin Gas Co., or Murray & Massie was a proximate cause of the occurrence. In answer to jury question number two, the jury apportioned the percentage of causation attributable to Leig-hia Hutchison at 30 percent, the percentage attributable to Laura Blevins at 70 percent, and the percentage attributable to Murray & Massie and the other two named parties at zero. 4 The jury questions on damages were conditioned upon affirmative findings on the liability issues and, consequently, were not answered. Appellants appeal from a take-nothing judgment on the verdict after denial of their motion for new trial.

C. The Expert Testimony

1. The Investigation

Kenny Lemons, a fire investigator certified by the State, was a deputy with the Clay County Sheriffs office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.W.3d 554, 2005 WL 32201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchison-v-pharris-texapp-2005.