Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. Appel

1953 OK 344, 266 P.2d 442, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 17, 1953
Docket35456
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1953 OK 344 (Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. Appel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. Appel, 1953 OK 344, 266 P.2d 442, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 667 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

O’NEAL, Justice.

The record before us presents two pivotal questions; namely, does the proof support the ' allegations of negligence-and causal connection as set out in the petition, and aré the amounts of the verdicts sustained by the evidence.

Laura Appel, Barbara Sue Appel, an infant, by her father and next friend, and Charles F: Appel, filed three separate suits against the Oklahoma' Natural Gas Company, a corporation, alleging that each plaintiff suffered damages, either in person or property, resulting from a gas explosion in their home on January 5, 1948. As'the separate petitions are- identical in form and substance, other than the monetary relief prayed for, and'as the three cases were consolidated for trial, separate verdicts rendered, and separate judgments entered thereon, our reference to the pleadings, nature of the actions and conclusions as to the probative value of the evidence to support the verdicts will generally be applicable to each case.

Shortly after the plaintiffs moved into their home in September, 1947, the odor of natural gas became noticeable throughout several rooms of the house. On several occasions in November and December, 1947, plaintiffs notified the defendant, Oklahoma Natural Gas Co., of gas odors and requested it to send out its service agent to examine the house for leaks in lines and valves. After defendant’s servicemen made their investigation they advised plaintiffs that “everything was alright.”

On January S, 1948, there was an explosion resulting in physical injuries to Mrs. Appel and her daughter, Barbara Sue. The plaintiff, Charles F. Appel, and their minor son, were not at home when the explosion occurred.

The separate petitions substantially allege that the plaintiffs’ residence was serviced by the defendant company, and that in the performance of said services the defendant had negligently permitted gas to escape from connections in the house for some time prior to their occupancy thereof, which fact was not known to the plaintiffs, but was known to the defendant as the previous occupants of the house had made numerous complaints of escaping gas to the defendant company.

Negligence is predicated upon an allegation that after defendant was advised of the gas leaks it failed to turn off. the gas until necessary repairs could be made, or that it failed to discover that the gas was leaking and carelessly and negligently permitted the gas to flow into and through its lines, or the gas connections in the house, causing an excess accumulation of gas and the resulting explosion; that the defendant failed to advise or inform plaintiffs of the danger incident to the escaping gas in the house.

*445 Defendant answered by way of a general denial and further pleaded the terms of its service contract as it applied to lines and the connections within the house. Defendant contended below and here that there is no evidence reasonably tending to support or establish plaintiff’s causes of action and that the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence as well as denying its motion for a directed verdict. Other alleged errors are subsidiary and will be noted in our analysis of the ■ evidence.

The residence occupied by the plaintiffs was constructed in 1945, and occupied by the builder and owner until September, 1947.' During this period the then occupant notified the gas company on numerous occasions that gas was escaping in the house. After an examination of the house and premises, the gas company advised the occupant that everything was alright. The owner’s evidence in this respect is corroborated by his wife and son.

The plaintiffs moved into the house in September, 1947, and shortly thereafter detected the odor of gas in several rooms of the house and on two occasions, both in the month of November and December, 1947, plaintiffs notified defendant that gas was escaping in the house. On each occasion defendant’s ' serviceman made an inspection and advised plaintiffs that everything was alright. The gas explosion occurred on January 5, 1948.

One of plaintiffs’ neighbors testified that from September, 1947, to the date of the explosion, she had frequently visited the Appels’ home, and on these occasions noted escaping gas in several rooms of the house.

Defendant contends that there is a failure of proof that the explosion resulted from escaping gas, either in its lines or the gas installations within the house. The record discloses that immediately after the explosion occurred, three members of the Oklahoma City Fire Department made an inspection of the house and an investigation of the 'cause of the explosion. Their testimony is to the effect that the partition walls between the living room and dining room were blown down; piaster on the kitchen ceiling was blown off; the roof of the house was raised from 12 to 18 inches; the south wall of the kitchen was blown out into the yard; some of, the bricks were blown off of the outside walls of the house and several of the windows were blown out. They further stated that there was little fire resulting from the explosion, other than the burning of curtains in the kitchen. They found that the kitchen stove was not burning but the pilot light on the water heater and on the floor furnace was burning. These witnesses, after detailing their experiences covering a period of years with reference to gas explosions, stated that gas had a tendency to rise and would accumulate over long periods of time from small leaks; they would eventually fill the attic or walls of the house and that in their opinion the explosion resulted from such a gas accumulation.

Corroborating the foregoing evidence that the explosion resulted from leaking gas, M. A. Witte, Chief Engineer of the Oklahoma Testing Laboratories and a graduate in chemical engineering from the University of Oklahoma, in response to a hypothetical question expressed the opinion that the explosion was of natural gas, rather than some inflammable substance such as kerosene or something like that. He stated that natural gas had a tendency to accumulate over a long period of time in attics or walls of a house, especially where the attic or walls had , a considerable amount of dead space where no air could circulate. He further testified that as there was very little fire resulting from the explosion it indicated that it was a natural gas explosion, rather than one from some other cause; that if gas escaped in the plaintiffs’ kitchen 10x10x8, or in the walls of that room at the rate-of one cubic foot per hour, that sufficient gas could accumulate to-cause an explosion. He further -.stated that a burning pilot light would not ignite gas as it escaped in the air of the room-until a sufficient quantity escaped to create-an explosive mixture.

Further evidence submitted in chief by plaintiffs had reference to the burns or the- *446 physical injuries' of the plaintiffs, Laura and -Barbara Sue Appel and the damages claimed by the plaintiff, 'Charles F. Appel, to which we will subsequently advert.

Defendant here contends that the trial court should have disregarded the evidence of the witness, Witte, which would necessitate sustaining the demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence. It is not contended that the witness, Witte, was not qualified to give expert testimony but it is asserted that the hypothetical question propounded did not give the witness the actual facts in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 344, 266 P.2d 442, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-natural-gas-co-v-appel-okla-1953.