McAfee v. City of Garnett

469 P.2d 295, 205 Kan. 269, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 280
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 9, 1970
Docket45,566
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 469 P.2d 295 (McAfee v. City of Garnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAfee v. City of Garnett, 469 P.2d 295, 205 Kan. 269, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 280 (kan 1970).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fontron, J.:

Only two parties are concerned in this appeal, the City of Garnett, Kansas, and Cities Service Gas Company, to whom we shall hereafter refer as City, or plaintiff and Cities Service, or defendant. The trial court entered summary judgment in favor of Cities Service and the City has appealed.

The sequence of events forming the background of this case is as follows: Prior to 1947 the City, which owns the natural gas distribution plant supplying gas to its residents, obtained its gas supply from nearby wells, with Cities Service being on a standby basis. During that period the City odorized the gas before distributing it to its customers.

On June of that year, the City and Cities Service entered into an agreement in which Cities Service agreed to supply the City with sufficient natural gas of merchantable quality for all its needs. At this point the City ceased odorizing the gas in its distribution system.

Apparently all went well until the late fall of 1964, when an explosion occurred at the home of the Maddy family, the cause of which was never determined. On the evening of January 5, 1965, a floor furnace flared up in the house owned by the McAfees, situated across the street from the Maddy residence. The McAfee house was rented at the time to the Wallace family. Immediately after the flare-up, Mr. Wallace turned off the gas and the following morning a check was made by the superintendent of the City gas plant and a plumber, who was called in to help. These two men detected no problems and the gas was turned on again later in the day.

On the same evening, January 6, 1965, an explosion occurred killing one of the Wallace sons and severely injuring Mr. Wallace and their other boy. The Wallaces, who subsequently moved from Garnett, brought an action in federal court against the City to recover damages for the death of the child and for the personal injuries sustained by Mr. Wallace and the surviving son. Mr. and Mrs. McAfee also filed suit against the City to recover damages resulting to their house, but their action was filed in the District Court of Anderson County, Kansas.

*271 In both actions, the one by the Wallaces in federal court and the one by the McAfees in state court, the City filed third-party petitions against Cities Service, contending that Cities Service had breached its obligation to furnish the City with natural gas of merchantable quality and praying that in the event judgments be rendered against the City that then it recover judgment against Cities Service in like sum or sums. In federal court, the Wallace action against the City was separated for trial from the third-party suit by the City against Cities Service, and we are advised that judgments were entered therein against the City in amounts totaling $148,000. The third party claim of the City against Cities Service is still pending in federal court, apparently awaiting the outcome of this appeal.

The action brought by the McAfees against the City in the state court was separately tried and resulted in a judgment against the city for $9,000. No appeal has been taken from that judgment. Thereafter, Cities Service filed a motion for summary judgment in response to the third-party claim of the City. In ruling on this motion the trial court had before it not only the pleadings in this case, but also, by stipulation, the transcript of the federal case, including the discovery proceedings, so far as they were relevant to this case.

Summary judgment was entered by the court in favor of Cities Service on the ground that there remained no genuine issue of material fact between the parties. In entering judgment the trial court filed a comprehensive memorandum opinion to which we shall refer as needed. As we have said, the City has appealed.

The main thrust of the City’s argument may be stated this way: That Cities Service, by failing to odorize the gas before delivery to the City distribution plant, thereby breached its contractual duty to deliver gas of merchantable quality. The argument in this regard is three pronged: First, that natural gas with no odor is dangerous for distribution to consumers; second, that gas which is dangerous for consumers to use is not fit for its intended purpose; and third, that gas not fit for its intended purpose is not of merchantable quality.

Cities Service makes no contention that the gas supplied to the City had been odorized by means of an additive, or malodorant as it is sometimes called, but maintains that odorization has nothing to do with its merchantable quality, within the meaning of its contract. Hence, Cities Service argues that its failure to odorize the *272 gas before delivery to the City does not constitute a breach of its warranty to supply gas of merchantable quality.

The question then, in our opinion, narrows down to this: Was the gas delivered to the City, without the addition of a malodorant, of merchantable quality within the intendment of the contract? Or, to phrase the query in a slightly different context, can it be said the delivery of odorized gas was within the contemplation of the parties when they entered into their agreement?

Before proceeding to examine certain portions of the evidence deemed pertinent, we refer to the rule that in the construction of contracts, primary focus must be directed toward ascertaining the intention of the parties as gathered from the subject matter of the agreement, the language employed and the surrounding circumstances. (Stevens v. Farmers Elevator Mutual Ins. Co., 197 Kan. 74, 76, 415 P. 2d 236; New Hampshire Ins. Co. v. Fox Midwest Theatres, Inc., 203 Kan. 721, 457 P. 2d 133.

So far as relevant to the question before us, the provision of the contract as to merchantability is set forth in these words:

“The natural gas supplied hereunder shall be of a merchantable quality and shall have a system wide weighted average total heat content of not less than nine hundred thirty-four (934) British Thermal Units per cubic foot saturated with water vapor under the standard measurement next recited. . . .”

According to the experts produced by Cities Service, it appears that the natural gas sold to the City comes from the Oklahoma Plugoton gas field and is relatively free from sulphur, itself a potent source of stench; and that Cities Service produces no gas itself but buys it either at the wellhead or at the tailgate of a processing plant. After coming from the well, the gas is processed to extract some of the liquefiable carbons, which give natural gas its odor, and which otherwise would normally drop out in transmission. Some two-thirds of the heavier hydrocarbons are removed from the gas, in such form as propane, butane, etc., which reduces the odor by such percentage. No malodorizing agent is added to the gas as it is transported through the pipeline, although the gas still retains a perceptible odor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
469 P.2d 295, 205 Kan. 269, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcafee-v-city-of-garnett-kan-1970.