Mathine v. Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Co., Inc.

202 N.W.2d 191, 189 Neb. 247, 1972 Neb. LEXIS 699
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1972
Docket38452
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 202 N.W.2d 191 (Mathine v. Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathine v. Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Co., Inc., 202 N.W.2d 191, 189 Neb. 247, 1972 Neb. LEXIS 699 (Neb. 1972).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

Plaintiffs brought this action against the defendant gas company to recover for damage to a mobile home and its contents from fire which occurred on January 25, 1967, alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the defendant in the installation of equipment con[249]*249verting the furnace in the mobile home from liquified petroleum to natural gas usage. The conversion kit was furnished by the plaintiffs. The alleged negligence was the failure of the defendant to install a gas pressure regulator which was a part of the kit. At the close of the plaintiffs’ evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict on the grounds of the insufficiency of the evidence to present a jury question. The motion was sustained. Plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial which was overruled and the plaintiffs appeal.

Plaintiffs assign as error the direction of the verdict and the sustention of the defendant’s objection to the opinion testimony of one Herman Nolte as to the cause of the fire.

The following is a summary of the pertinent evidence introduced by the plaintiffs. They ordered and received from the manufacturer of the furnace a natural gas conversion kit. The kit consisted of orifices and a pressure regulator. The plaintiffs requested the defendant to convert the furnace in the mobile home from liquified petroleum to natural gas use and this the defendant agreed to do. An employee of the defendant came to do the work and the plaintiffs gave him the conversion kit. The employee installed the orifices but not the gas regulator. Mrs. Mathine testified that the employee, during the course of the work, came to her with the pressure regulator and asked her what it was and if it was to be installed on the furnace. She told him she did not know, but obtained for him the furnace instruction manual which came with the mobile home. The two of them examined the manual together but found nothing with reference to the regulator.

The manual itself was offered and received in evidence at the trial. It contains the following:

“10. ADJUSTING THE UNIT
“General Controls KX36HR combination gas control valve is used on all models except the 268 IB. This [250]*250model uses a General Controls B57 combination valve____
“Gas Controls
“Included in the KX36HR Control ■ are pressure regulator, solenoid gas valve, and main manual gas valve. (See Figure 10.) The pressure regulator is adjustable between 3 and 4 inches w.c. On furnaces equipped for L.P. Gas, working parts have been removed from the pressure regulator. The valve provides 100% shutoff to both the pilot and main burner.
“The B57 combination valve is shown in Figure 11. It includes a main manual gas valve, diaphragm valve, safety valve which provides 100% shut-off to both the pilot and main burners, and a pressure regulator on the natural gas control.
“The pressure regulator is set at 3W.C. and is adjustable between 3 and 4 inches W.C.
“There is no pressure regulator on the L.P. gas value.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Figure 10 in the maintenance manual shows a picture of a control including a pressure regulator attached. Figure 11 shows a picture of another control. It appears to contain a regulator within the unit itself.

The plaintiffs retained the pressure regulator when it was returned to them by the defendant’s employee when he had finished his work and it was introduced into evidence at the trial.

There was also received and introduced into evidence a furnace operations manual which plaintiffs had received at the time of the purchase of the mobile home. This operations manual included a warranty and in appropriate spaces provided therein there appear in inked handwriting the model number, 2682B, the serial number of the unit, the date of installation, and the name of the installer. This evidence would be sufficient, in the absence of objection, to establish that the furnace was the type which was. equipped with the control shown in figure 10.

The conversion was made on September 22, 1966. The [251]*251furnace functioned satisfactorily until January 25, 1967, when Mrs. Mathine and the children discovered flames coming from the furnace. She testified that it was “roaring at that time.” The fire department was called. It extinguished the fire but not before the mobile home and contents were badly damaged.

After the fire the furnace and mobile home were inspected on separate occasions by Herman Nolte and Jeff Banta. Nolte had been in the heating and air conditioning business since 1946 and was an experienced furnace installer and repairman. He had attended manufacturer’s schools on furnace installation and repair. He testified with reference to furnaces that “basically the entrance of gas and burning of gas and exhaust of the fumes is pretty much alike on all of them,” and that they all have blowers, burning chambers, valves, and pressure regulators. He further testified that a furnace such as the plaintiffs’, while it was burning L.P. gas, did not require a regulator because there was a regulator on the L.P. tank itself, but that upon conversion the natural gas “pressures would have to be a little bit different, and it should have a regulator right on the furnace.” The court thereafter struck an immediately following answer to the same effect because “I don’t think you have laid the foundation for your question as to this furnace that you are talking about.” The court and counsel had apparently overlooked the fact that the insertions in the operations manual identified the plaintiffs’ furnace as a model 2682B which, according to the installation manual, uses a KX36HR control from which parts of the pressure regulator have been removed for liquified petroleum use.

Nolte made his inspection of the plaintiffs’ furnace on February 3, 1967. At that time he was shown by Mr. Mathine the pressure regulator. This regulator he identified from the witness stand and stated he was familiar with the type of regulator and knew how it worked. He testified that its purpose was “to keep the [252]*252pressure constant so that your . . . flame would have proper combustion.” He also testified his inspection on February 3 showed that the furnace had no gas pressure regulator on it. It had only a control valve without a pressure regulator.

He noted that the wooden furnace enclosure was charred opposite the openings or “knockouts” of the furnace. The wood was separated from the furnace about 1% inches. He was asked if he had an opinion as to the cause of the fire. He stated he did. When asked what that opinion was, an objection by the defendant was sustained. The plaintiffs then made the following offer of the witness’ answer: “. . . because of the absence of the pressure regulator, the furnace overfired thereby causing flame to occur outside of the natural combustion chamber and traveling in such a direction as to place itself outside the knock-out holes heating the wood paneling to its flush (sic) point and thereby causing the ensuing fire.” The ground of the defendant’s objection was that “no proper foundation laid to qualify the witness as being competent, able to act as an expert witness in giving the cause of the fire, or being able to testify based on the foundation made as to the cause of the fire.”

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Mathine v. Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Co., Inc.
202 N.W.2d 191 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
202 N.W.2d 191, 189 Neb. 247, 1972 Neb. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathine-v-kansas-nebraska-natural-gas-co-inc-neb-1972.