Moore v. Mississippi Valley Gas Co.
This text of 863 So. 2d 43 (Moore v. Mississippi Valley Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Latoya Denise MOORE, A Minor by and through her Next Friend, Jerome MOORE
v.
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY GAS COMPANY, A Mississippi Corporation and Rheem Manufacturing Company.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*44 Suzanne Griggins Keys, attorney for appellant.
Myles A. Parker, Robert Douglas Morgan, Charles E. Griffin, James L. Carroll, Dennis Brown, attorneys for appellees.
Before McRAE, P.J., WALLER and GRAVES, JJ.
GRAVES, Justice, for the Court.
¶ 1. This products liability case is on appeal from an order of the Hinds County Circuit Court, First Judicial District, granting summary judgment to Mississippi Valley Gas Company (MVG) and Rheem Manufacturing Company (Rheem). The complaint in this matter was filed on July 29, 1996, by LaToya Denise Moore, a minor by and through her next friend, Daphne Sultan. Daphne Sultan, her mother, has since died, and Latoya's father, Jerome Moore, has been substituted as her next friend.
¶ 2. The complaint alleged that on February 19, 1989, LaToya suffered injury when she fell into a tub of hot water and that the hot water was produced by Rheem's gas water heater. Moore contended that Rheem's water heater was unreasonably dangerous in design, that a feasible alternative existed, and that Rheem also failed to warn of the danger of its use.
¶ 3. MVG and Rheem answered, denying any liability. Discovery proceeded in this matter after which MVG and Rheem filed a combined motion for summary judgment and memorandum in support of summary judgment on September 5, 2001. On December 5, 2001, Moore filed a response to the motion for summary judgment and a supplemental response on January 18, 2002. The trial judge granted MVG and Rheem's motion on March 12, 2002. It is from this order that Moore has filed the instant appeal. The following issues are presented for consideration by this Court:
I. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT WHEN THERE IS A GENUINE ISSUE OF MATERIAL FACT CONCERNING:
A. THE IDENTIFICATION OF THE PRODUCT INVOLVED;
B. THE DEFECTIVE CONDITION AND UNREASONABLE DANGEROUSNESS OF THE PRODUCT;
C. THE INADEQUACY OF WARNING;
D. THE FEASIBLE ALTERNATIVE DESIGN.
II. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT WHEN THE DEFENDANTS ARE NOT ENTITLED TO JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW.
*45 FACTS
¶ 4. At approximately 8:00 p.m. on February 18, 1989, Deborah Sultan decided to take a bath at her home located at 511 Hemlock Street in Jackson, Mississippi. On the night the incident occurred, eleven people who resided in the home were present, including Deborah Sultan's eighteen-year-old daughter, Plaintiff Daphne Sultan, along with her eleven-month-old daughter, Plaintiff LaToya Moore.
¶ 5. Deborah Sultan only put hot water in the bathtub and filled it approximately half full and then left the bathroom to let the water cool down. Deborah Sultan partially closed the door. Approximately five minutes after Deborah Sultan left the bathroom, her nine-year-old daughter, Maranda, told her "the baby was in the tub." Deborah then rushed to the bathroom and found plaintiff Daphne Sultan attempting to remove LaToya's clothes. An ambulance was called, and LaToya was rushed to the hospital. It was determined that LaToya had sustained hot water burns over 90% of her body.
¶ 6. University Hospital physician, Dr. Mike Osborne, informed the Jackson Police that LaToya had suffered a "prolonged exposure to hot water, not just a quick submersion."
¶ 7. Both plaintiff Daphne Sultan and Deborah Sultan initially told the police that LaToya fell in the bathtub of hot water while unsupervised and "that they don't normally leave LaToya unattended while bath water is running because she has fallen in this bathtub before." However, plaintiff Daphne Sultan changed her story a month later when on March 31, 1989, she reported to the police that her mother's boyfriend, Glenn Stephenson, had intentionally put LaToya in the tub of hot water. Daphne Sultan returned to the police fifteen months later and renewed her accusation against Stephenson. Moreover, in different therapy sessions, Daphne Sultan repeatedly told counselors with Catholic Charities that Stephenson had badly burned LaToya.
¶ 8. Despite her accusations against Stephenson, Daphne Sultan eventually filed this lawsuit on July 29, 1996, wherein she blamed the incident on the landlord, Defendant Gene Rice, MVG, and Rheem. Gene Rice was ultimately dismissed with prejudice.
DISCUSSION
A. THE IDENTIFICATION OF THE PRODUCT INVOLVED.
¶ 9. Moore argues that the accused hot water heater was a 40-gallon Rheem hot water heater. The record reveals that there is no witness who can identify the make, model, or manufacturer of the allegedly defective hot water heater. The only evidence of any involvement by Rheem is a sales invoice stating that Cornelius Williams, who previously resided at 511 Hemlock, purchased a 40-gallon hot water heater, Serial # 0181M17815 (the 1981 hot water heater), from MVG on February 13, 1981. This receipt does not indicate at what address the listed hot water heater was installed. Williams is deceased. Waller Plumbing, who installed the hot water heater, no longer exists. In 1991, Rice, the landlord, replaced the 1981 hot water heater with a new one. This was due to a leak which developed in the hot water heater. The 1981 hot water heater was discarded, and Rice is unaware whether it was a Rheem product or bore the Serial # 0181M17815. Several years later, the 1991 hot water heater began to leak, and it was replaced in 1996 with yet another hot water heater.
¶ 10. More than seven years after LaToya's 1989 burning, Rheem and MVG first learned of the incident when they *46 were served with the instant lawsuit, which was filed in 1996. Because the 1981 hot water heater had already been destroyed, Rheem and MVG did not have the opportunity to identify, view, inspect or test the hot water heater. Thus, no one is certain whether the 1981 hot water heater was in fact a Rheem product. Therefore, a jury verdict would be based on speculation and/or conjecture. Mississippi law is clear and unambiguous that such a verdict cannot stand. Barnes v. Taylor, 347 So.2d 972, 974 (Miss.1977). We find that there is insufficient evidence to determine the product/manufacturer identification.
B. THE DEFECTIVE CONDITION AND UNREASONABLE DANGEROUSNESS OF THE PRODUCT.
C. THE INADEQUACY OF WARNING.
D. THE FEASIBLE ALTERNATIVE DESIGN.
II. SUMMARY JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW.
¶ 11. Inasmuch as sub-issues of issue one and issue two are related, they will be discussed simultaneously. Moore argues that the defective condition of the hot water heater created an unreasonably dangerous product which failed to adequately warn consumers of its hazardous design and feasible design alternative.
¶ 12. The provisions for a products liability claim is detailed in Miss.Code Ann. § 11-1-63 which states:
(a) The manufacturer or seller of the product shall not be liable if the claimant does not prove by the preponderance of the evidence that at the time the product left the control of the manufacturer or seller:
(i)1.
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