Lone Star Gas Co. v. Denton

270 S.W.2d 245, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2718
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 29, 1954
Docket3201
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 270 S.W.2d 245 (Lone Star Gas Co. v. Denton) 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
Lone Star Gas Co. v. Denton, 270 S.W.2d 245, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2718 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

TIREY, Justice.

Appellees brought this suit against appellant for damages on account of the loss of four shade trees, their suit being grounded on alleged negligence of appellant’s agent in permitting propane gas to escape into the limbs and branches of the trees while filling a tank with propane gas. The jury in its verdict found that the death of the trees was not caused by an unavoidable accident; that gas escaped from the storage tank of the plaintiffs into their trees; that such gas escaped from said storage tank because of the negligence of appellant’s agent and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the death of the trees. The jury awarded appellees the sum of $400 for their loss. The court overruled appellant’s motion to disregard the answer of the jury to Special Issue No. 4 and granted appellees’ motion for judgment. Appellant assails the judgment on two grounds: (1) “The court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to disregard the jury finding in answer to Special Issue No. 4 and in overruling defendant’s motion for judgment non obstante veredicto because there is no competent evidence of any probative force to support the finding that the escape of the propane gas was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiffs’ trees.” (2) “The court erred in overruling defendant’s amended motion for new trial because the jury finding that the escape of propane gas proximately caused the death of plaintiffs’ trees is not supported by sufficient evidence and is contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence.”

Appellees’ Counter Points are: “(1) The jury finding that the escape of propane gas was the proximate cause of the death of appellees’ trees is supported by the evidence; (2) There is competent evidence of probative force that the escape of propane gas was the proximate cause of the death of appellees’ trees.”

In appellant’s brief we find substantially this statement: Plaintiffs owned their home in Woodbury, Hill County. A road ran north and south in front of their house which faced west. Running parallel with the south side of the house were three hackberry trees, these trees being about 30 feet south of the house. Between the house and the tree farthest east was located plaintiffs’ propane storage tank. The distance between each of these three trees was about 10 feet. A fourth tree was located in front of plaintiffs’ house, right at the edge of the road, which was about 40 feet from the storage tank.

On July 28, 1952, appellant’s propane gas delivery man drove his filler truck to plaintiffs’ home for the purpose of filling their storage tank, arriving about 1:00 P.M. He drove his truck up to the storage tank and found that it contained 125 gallons of propane and proceeded to fill it to its normal capacity of 425 gallons. In order to fill the tank, the agent connected two valves on his truck to two similar valves on the customer’s storage tank by means of two hoses. The “filler *247 valve” on the customer’s tank is the one through which the gas is transmitted from the truck tank. The other valve, called the “equalizer valve”, about ¾ inches in diameter, serves the purpose of equalizing the pressure between the customer’s tank and the truck tank. No defect existed in and no gas escaped from the filler valve or its connecting hose on the occasion in question; but after filling the tank and as he began to unscrew the hose connected to the equalizer valve the agent noticed that some vapor started coming out and he realized that a defect existed in the equalizer valve. The foregoing recitations appear to he without dispute.

The testimony is conflicting concerning the length of time that the propane vapor escaped from the equalizer valve.

Mrs. Denton testified to the effect that she was sitting in her southeast bedroom by the window while the agent was filling the storage tank and observed that the agent broke the valve. She said he left and was away for a period of 25 or 30 minutes, and that gas was escaping during this time.

Lewis, a cousin of Mr. Denton, who lives about 150 yards northwest from the Denton home, testified that he walked out the back door of his house and saw a man holding a hose on the north side of the trees “pretty close” to the Denton storage tank, but he did not know whether gas was getting on all of the trees or just one tree. Mr. Lewis testified that he could smell the fumes but could not see them.

The witness Corpier, a neighbor of the Dentons, whose house is 75 or 80 yards from the Denton home, testified that he was out at his barn when he heard a "“spewing noise” and that he observed the fumes going through the branches of the Denton trees for a period of 15 or 30 minutes ; that the best he could tell the fumes were coming from the Denton storage tank and that they were blowing in a westerly •or northwesterly direction.

Mrs. Denton also said that the trees began to die in three days. Mr. Denton said that within a few days after July 28th, the leaves were dead and began to shed, that he broke some of the limbs and found that there was no live sap in them, and found that they began to die within three days.

The witness Lewis stated that the trees were dying about two weeks after the propane vapor escaped.

The appellants’ agent testified that he disconnected the hose to the equalizer valve, and attempted to pull the small pin in the center of the valve back' up in place with a pair of pliers that he carried for that purpose; that after he was unable to do so, he immediately screwed the connecting hose back on the equalizer valve and tightened it down so as to stop the flow of vapor, and he estimated that vapor escaped no longer than ten seconds while he had the equalizer hose disconnected; appellant’s agent further testified to the effect that he turned the cutoff on the equalizer off and disconnected the end attached to his truck and left the appellees’ tank with no gas escaping and drove to a nearby store to make a telephone call to his foreman in Hillsboro in order to have an equalizer valve and a long hose brought out to the Denton residence; that in about thirty minutes the equipment arrived and during this interval he filled another customer’s tank and then returned to the Denton residence; that after his foreman arrived with the new equalizer valve and drainage hose they made some examination of the Denton tank and at the time of their arrival the Denton storage tank still contained 425 gallons of propane gas and that no gas was escaping; that they then proceeded to pump all but about 5 or 10 gallons from the Denton storage tank into the filler truck; that they did this to release completely the pressure from the storage tank and that in doing so they stretched a 49 foot hose out to the edge of the road in front of the Denton residence, west of the trees, and let vapor escape from the end of the hose; that the vapor was blowing away from the trees and that none of it got on any of the four trees; they also said that the hose reached *248 the edge of the road in front of the Denton home, out beyond the trees here in question.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W.2d 245, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lone-star-gas-co-v-denton-texapp-1954.