McVaney v. BAIRD, HOLM, McEACHEN

466 N.W.2d 499, 237 Neb. 451, 1991 Neb. LEXIS 122
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1991
Docket88-881
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 466 N.W.2d 499 (McVaney v. BAIRD, HOLM, McEACHEN) 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
McVaney v. BAIRD, HOLM, McEACHEN, 466 N.W.2d 499, 237 Neb. 451, 1991 Neb. LEXIS 122 (Neb. 1991).

Opinion

*453 Fahrnbruch, J.

John J. McVaney appeals a directed verdict adverse to him in an attorney malpractice action in which he alleged inter alia that the defendant law firm failed to timely file a negligence action against the Metropolitan Utilities District (MUD).

In directing a verdict at the close of the plaintiff’s case in chief for the defendant law firm, Baird, Holm, McEachen, Pedersen, Hamann & Strasheim (Baird), the district court for Douglas County found as a matter of law that McVaney failed to adduce sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that negligence on the part of MUD was the proximate cause of an explosion which destroyed a building McVaney owned. We affirm.

In effect, the trial court held that one of the two experts called to testify by McVaney could not testify to a reasonable degree of certainty that any of the things that MUD did or failed to do was a proximate cause of the explosion and that the second expert’s opinion regarding proximate cause was based not upon facts, but impermissibly upon mere conjecture.

On the night of February 5, 1983, a veterinary hospital in Omaha owned by McVaney, who was licensed to practice veterinary medicine at that time, was destroyed by a natural gas explosion. For several days preceding the explosion, McVaney and others reported to MUD that they smelled natural gas in the vicinity of the veterinary hospital. In its normal state, natural gas is odorless, and an odor is introduced into the gas as a safety measure. This odor is commonly referred to as “gas.” From January 26 to and including February 4,1983, MUD employees made several visits to McVaney’s property and to the vicinity of the hospital in an attempt to identify and repair any suspected gas leaks.

MUD provided natural gas to McVaney’s hospital through a service line from a main in a street to a gas meter located on the west side of McVaney’s building. Piping from the meter ran through a wall (wall pipe) and was attached to a fuel line within the hospital’s basement. The internal fuel line traversed the basement to the east side, where it was connected by several pipes to a hot water heater and two furnaces. MUD owned the gas meter and the pipe extending from the main in the street to *454 McVaney’s gas meter. The remaining piping, connecting the gas meter to the hospital’s internal system, was owned by McVaney.

In the basement of the hospital, there was a partial false ceiling approximately 2 feet below the first floor. The east side of the basement, housing the furnaces and water heater, had no false ceiling. The furnaces and water heater were located in the northeast section of the basement. There was a sound-deadening wall between the furnaces and a series of pens to the west. An exhaust fan, located on the basement’s west wall below the false ceiling, was capable of removing 6,000 to 12,000 cubic feet of air per hour from the basement. The basement’s volume was 17,400 cubic feet. McVaney testified that the fan in the basement was operating continuously during the 7-day period preceding the explosion.

On January 26, 1983, McVaney smelled gas in a first-floor reception area of his hospital. He relighted the pilot lights of the furnaces and the hot water heater, which were out, and he contacted MUD. On that date, no gas leak was found by MUD personnel, but the gas meter was replaced. On January 31, McVaney again smelled gas in the reception area of his hospital and called MUD. A responding MUD employee discovered a gas leak and tightened a loose pipefitting in the basement of McVaney’s building.

On February 2, McVaney detected the odor of gas as he entered his hospital. He telephoned MUD. MUD workers found negligible gas leaks inside McVaney’s hospital on February 2, which they attributed to methane gas released by animal wastes. They further reported a Class I leak in the vicinity of a stop box located approximately 100 feet from McVaney’s hospital. The stop box was situated underneath the other side of the street from McVaney’s building and was not connected to the fuel line inside McVaney’s building. According to MUD’s procedures manual, a Class I leak is one that “represents an existing or probable hazard to persons or property, and requires immediate repair or continuous action until the conditions are no longer hazardous.” An MUD construction crew was dispatched to the site to investigate, and it concluded that the situation was not hazardous and that it did not warrant further attention that night. On February 3, MUD *455 workers returned to the site, but found no gas leaks.

MUD personnel returned to the vicinity of McVaney’s hospital on February 4, after a deputy sheriff reported smelling gas in the area. The MUD workers found a gas leak on a gas service valve across the street, west from McVaney’s building. The record is undisputed that this leak would not have affected McVaney’s building, which was located on the east side of the street, as the pocket of gas found underneath the west side of the street never migrated beyond the street’s east curb.

On February 4, in view of the problems with leaking gas encountered during the week, an MUD employee decided to test the gas service lines to McVaney’s hospital. Combustible gas indicator and flame ionization unit tests performed by an MUD crew revealed no leak within the McVaney hospital. Both tests are designed to detect the presence of a gas leak. A soapy solution which bubbles when there is a gas leak was also applied to the wall pipe and the fittings of the gas appliances, but did not disclose the presence of any gas leak.

Gas service to McVaney’s building was shut off on February 4 so that the pipes could be pressure tested. This fourth test was conducted on the entire gasline from the main in the street to the valves on the water heater and two furnaces located in the basement of McVaney’s building. The test disclosed a loss of pressure, indicating the existence of a leak somewhere in the fuel line between the appliance valves on the hot water heater and two furnaces and the gas meter. The test was conducted twice, with identical results. In accordance with their procedures manual, MUD personnel classified the leak as a Class III leak, which is defined in the MUD manual as “non-hazardous at the time of detection and can be reasonably expected to remain non-hazardous.” The leak was “about the size of a pilot light.” One of McVaney’s two experts testified that such a leak was “insignificant,” and McVaney’s second expert testified that a leak of that size would not pose a risk of explosion. MUD’s investigator, who was called by the plaintiff, testified without reservation that the leak was not hazardous. MUD’s engineering and construction manager, who was also called by the plaintiff, testified that the leak was nonhazardous and would reasonably be expected to remain so. There were no *456 other experts who testified on that point.

On that same day, MUD workers chipped away some concrete from the wall pipe and discovered that the pipe did not have a sleeve, which was due to the owner’s construction. Although there was no MUD requirement that a sleeve be in place, MUD personnel were concerned regarding the lack of a sleeve encasing the wall pipe.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
466 N.W.2d 499, 237 Neb. 451, 1991 Neb. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcvaney-v-baird-holm-mceachen-neb-1991.