Kenneth O. Burnett & Vickie S. Burnett v. Frank E. Krisle & d/b/a Elite Electric - Concurring

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 22, 1995
Docket01A01-9505-CV-00196
StatusPublished

This text of Kenneth O. Burnett & Vickie S. Burnett v. Frank E. Krisle & d/b/a Elite Electric - Concurring (Kenneth O. Burnett & Vickie S. Burnett v. Frank E. Krisle & d/b/a Elite Electric - Concurring) 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.

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Kenneth O. Burnett & Vickie S. Burnett v. Frank E. Krisle & d/b/a Elite Electric - Concurring, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE WESTERN SECTION AT NASHVILLE

______________________________________________________________________ _________

KENNETH O. BURNETT, Davidson Circuit No. 89C-337 and VICKIE S. BURNETT, C.A. No. 01A01-9505-CV-00196

Plaintiffs/Appellees Hon. Paul R. White, Judge

VS.

FRANK E. KRISLE, Individually and d/b/a ELITE FILED ELECTRIC Dec. 22, 1995

Defendant/Appellant. Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk

ROBERT N. SKINNER, Nashville Attorney for Defendant/Appellant.

J. ANTHONY ARENA, Schulman, LeRoy & Bennett, P.C., Nashville Attorney for Plaintiffs/Appellees.

AFFIRMED

Opinion Filed: ______________________________________________________________________ ________

TOMLIN, Sr. J.

Kenneth O. Burnett and Vickie S. Burnett ("plaintiffs") filed suit in the Davidson

County Circuit Court against Frank E. Krisle, individually and d/b/a Elite Electric

("defendant") seeking damages resulting from a fire caused by defendant's negligence that

destroyed plaintiffs' home. The jury awarded plaintiffs compensatory damages in the

amount of $90,733.56, reduced by a finding that plaintiffs were ten percent (10%) at fault.

Defendant's motion for a new trial was denied. On appeal defendant has presented three

issues for our consideration: (1) whether there was any material evidence in the record

to support the jury verdict; (2) whether the trial court erred in refusing to grant defendant

a new trial or a remittitur; and (3) whether the trial court erred in refusing to allow

defendant to present a witness for testifying after defendant had rested his case. We find

no error and affirm.

Many of the basic facts are undisputed. Plaintiffs employed a general contractor

1 to construct an addition to their kitchen in their Nashville home. The general contractor

in turn employed defendant to do the electrical work. When construction began plaintiffs

met with the general contractor and an employee of defendant to show them the location

of the circuit breaker box in the basement of their residence. Mr. Burnett showed the two

men the breaker on the circuit leading to the kitchen as well as the breaker for the circuit

leading to a recessed wall heater in the basement bathroom, which bore the label "leave

off." Plaintiff testified that this bathroom heater had not been utilized since they

purchased the house six years earlier because the house was equipped with central

heating.

On that same day defendant installed some of the wiring but left a portion of the

work unfinished. Approximately one week later another of defendant's employees entered

plaintiffs' home unannounced for the purpose of installing electrical outlets and a ceiling

fan. After completing this work, this employee activated the breaker switch to the lines

in the kitchen to ascertain if the wiring had been properly installed. Shortly after this

employee left, the bathroom wall heater ignited combustibles in the bathroom, which

began a fire that destroyed the basement of plaintiffs' home and all of plaintiffs'

possessions in the house.

The jury was submitted a special verdict form, which they answered as follows:

1. Was the defendant Frank E. Krisle, individually and d/b/a Elite Electric negligent?

Answer: Yes (Yes or No)

....

2. Was the defendant Frank E. Krisle, individually and d/b/e Elite Electric's negligence a proximate cause of injury or damage to the plaintiffs?

3. Did the plaintiffs Kenneth Burnett's and Vickie Burnett's own negligence account for 50 percent or more of the total negligence that proximately cause plaintiffs' injuries or damages?

2 Answer: No (Yes or No)

4. What is the total amount of plaintiffs Kenneth Burnett's and Vickie Burnett's compensatory damages, determined without reference to the amount of their negligence?

Amount in dollars: $90,733.56

5. Using 100 percent as the total combined negligence which proximately caused the injuries or damages to the plaintiffs, what are the percentages of such negligence to be allocated to the plaintiffs Kenneth Burnett and Vickie Burnett and defendant Frank E. Krisle, individually and d/b/a Elite Electric?

Plaintiffs (Kenneth Burnett and Vickie Burnett) 10% (0-100)

+

Defendant (Frank E. Krisle, individually and d/b/a Elite Electric) 90% (0-100)

(Total must equal 100%)

I. Scope of Review

Our scope of review on appeal of a jury verdict is limited to whether the record

contains any material evidence to support the verdict. T.R.A.P. 13(d); Hobson v. First

State Bank, 777 S.W.2d 24, 32 (Tenn. App. 1989). Under this scope of review, we must

take the strongest view of the evidence to uphold the verdict, assume the truth of all that

lends to support it, discard all to the contrary, and allow all reasonable inferences to

sustain the verdict. Hobson, 777 S.W.2d at 32. Even if we might reach a different verdict

from that reached by the jury, if there is any material evidence to support the verdict, we

must affirm. Id.

In our opinion, there was ample material evidence to support the verdict the jury

has expressed in the special verdict form. Plaintiffs testified that they pointed out the

location of the breaker to the wall heater circuit to defendant's employee, and at that time

the switch was in the "off" position and clearly labeled "leave off." Plaintiffs further

3 testified that they had never used this wall heater during the entire time they had lived in

the house because the house had central heating.

The record reflects that another of defendant's employees arrived at plaintiffs' home

to complete the work at approximately 8:30 in the morning. He stated that he never saw

the warning label next to the wall heater circuit breaker and that at time he arrived the

basement was unlit and he did not have a flashlight with him. He was uncertain as to

whether he had activated more than one breaker switch on the breaker panel after

completing his work. This issue is without merit.

II. The New Trial/Remittitur Issue

In defendant's brief counsel bases his allegation of error on the part of the trial

court in failing to grant a new trial or remittitur on three aspects. First, defendant attacks

the jury’s award of damages for the loss of personal property of plaintiffs on the second

floor in light of testimony that there was no actual fire damage upstairs. This contention

raises again the question of whether there was any material evidence to support the

verdict. There was testimony to the effect that although only the basement portion of the

home was actually destroyed by fire, plaintiffs' personal property upstairs on the main

floor was completely destroyed by heat, smoke, and water damage. This contention is

without merit.

Next, defendant is bothered by a question the jury presented to the court during its

deliberation. A note from the jury stated:

Re Question #4: Does "compensatory damages" equate to the jury agreeing that the total loss (home and belongings) amounting to approx[imately] $91,000 is reasonable even if it is reduced by some percentage in question number five?

Defendant contends that this question clearly indicated that the jury had arrived at a

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Related

Hobson v. First State Bank
777 S.W.2d 24 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1989)

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