Schipper v. Levitt & Sons, Inc.

207 A.2d 314, 44 N.J. 70, 1965 N.J. LEXIS 210
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 19, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by231 cases

This text of 207 A.2d 314 (Schipper v. Levitt & Sons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schipper v. Levitt & Sons, Inc., 207 A.2d 314, 44 N.J. 70, 1965 N.J. LEXIS 210 (N.J. 1965).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Jacobs, J.

The plaintiffs sued for damages suffered as a result of the severe scalding received by the infant plaintiff *74 Lawrence J. Schipper, II when he came in contact with excessively hot water drawn from the faucet in the bathroom sink. The trial court dismissed the proceeding at the close of the plaintiffs’ case. They appealed to the Appellate Division and we certified before argument there.

The defendant Levitt & Sons, Inc. is a well-known mass developer of homes, specializing in planned communities. Its homes are generally sold on the basis of advertised models constructed in accordance with Levitt’s specifications. One of its communities is at Levittown (now known as Willingboro), New Jersey, where it built thousands of homes, including the home at 81 Shawmont Lane purchased in 1958 by the Kreitzers. This home was evidently built for the Kreitzers after they had selected a model, for Mrs. Kreitzer testified that “we watched the complete building of our home as it was going up.” The Kreitzers moved in during November 1958 and received a “Homeowner’s Guide” from Levitt which contained a message of welcome to Levittown and various informational items. Under the caption “Heating System” it advised that the “system consists of a gas-fired boiler supplying heating coils imbedded in the concrete floor beneath the tile” and that “as heated water is pumped through these heating coils, the coils warm the concrete in which they are imbedded and the entire floor becomes warm.” There was a cautionary note against any attempts at “adjustments” of the heating unit and instructions to call Public Service Electric and Gas Company “for emergency service.” Under the caption “Hot Water,” the Homeowner’s Guide had the following to say:

“You will find the hot water in your Levittown home much hotter than that to which you are accustomed. Hot water such as this is desirable for clothes washing as well as other uses.
We have provided at each fixture, mixing type faucets so that you adjust the water temperature to suit. The proper procedure at any faucet is to first open the cold water tap part way, and then turn on the hot water. This avoids wasting hot water and yields properly tempered water for bathing and dishwashing.”

*75 Mr. Kreitzer testified that he found the domestic hot water to be really hot and that he was burned on several occasions. He complained to Levitt’s representatives but was told that they could not reduce the temperature except through “the installation of a mixing valve” in the heating unit. Mr. Kreitzer also complained to the Public Service representatives but they told him that they could make no significant reduction in the temperature of the water. Mrs. Kreitzer testified that the water “was exceptionally hot coming out of the bathroom faucets.” She was burned mildly on several occasions and a house guest was “burned pretty badly” when she “didn’t have a chance to warn her.” Thereafter Mrs. Kreitzer put a handwritten note in the bathroom reading: “Caution. Water Hot. Turn on cold water first.” She did not recall whether the note was in the bathroom when the Kreitzers leased their house to the Schippers.

The plaintiff Mr. Lawrence J. Schipper testified that in July 1960 he leased the house at 81 Shawmont Lane from the Kreitzers for a term of one year. He did not recall that his lessors had mentioned anything about the hot water and he did not read the Plomeowner’s Guide until after the scalding of his son Lawrence J. Schipper, II. When he and his family moved in on August 13, 1960, he turned on the control switch in the closet which contained the gas-fired heating unit and waited for the gas to “cycle through.” He then tried the hot water faucet in the bathroom adjacent to the closet and noticed that the water coming from the tap “gave a sort of spitting noise and seemed to be a mixture of gas and steam.” He examined the heating unit to see whether it had any mechanism to control the temperature of the water and found none. He cautioned his wife and children that the water was “extremely hot” and that they would have to be careful until he “could find a means of regulating it.” He spoke to the realtor through whom he had negotiated his lease and, on the realtor’s recommendation, he decided to call Public Service on Monday morning August 15th when he “next expected their services to be available.” He did call Public Service at *76 about 8:30 on Monday morning and, in response, its representative made a service call later that morning but found the heating unit to be operating in normal fashion and could make no adjustment which would appreciably affect the temperature of the domestic hot water.

During the morning of August 15th and apparently before the Public Service representative had arrived, the scalding of the infant plaintiff (Larry), who was then sixteen months old, had occurred. Mrs. Schipper testified that she was upstairs when she heard Larry crying. She came downstairs, heard the water running, found the hot water faucet in the bathroom sink turned on, and realized that Larry had been scalded. He was taken immediately to the doctor’s office and then to the Cherry Hill hospital where he remained for seventy-four days. Thereafter he was hospitalized on three separate occasions and during two of these, skin grafting operations were performed.

In 1961 the plaintiffs filed a complaint against Levitt & Sons, Inc. and York Shipley, Inc., the company which manufactured the heating unit, and another complaint against Builders Supply Corporation, Levitt’s wholly owned subsidiary which had purchased the heating unit from York. Thereafter the matters were consolidated and amendments and other pleadings were duly filed. The plaintiffs charged that, in the construction of the Levittown homes, Levitt had directed and ordered the installation of a gas-fired hot water boiler and water distribution system which was so defectively designed and equipped “that it produced without notice or warning scalding hot water at a temperature that was dangerously high for ordinary domestic use” and that it “knew or should have known of the highly dangerous condition created by it, which involved an unreasonable risk of bodily harm to children of immature years and others, who had no means of discovering the condition or realizing the risks.” Similarly, the plaintiffs charged that York had manufactured the improperly designed system and that it knew or should have known of the highly dangerous condition created by it which *77 involved unreasonable risk of harm. The plaintiffs sought damages from Levitt and its wholly owned subsidiary Builders Supply and from York for the injuries sustained by the infant plaintiff as the result of his scalding and also sought consequential damages suffered by his father Lawrence J. Schipper.

In support of their complaints, the plaintiffs introduced expert and other testimony which dealt extensively with the installation and operation of the heating and hot water system. Mr. Witt testified that he was an experienced mechanical engineer, had been employed by Levitt for nine years, and was responsible for the design of the heating and hot water system in the New Jersey Levittown homes as well as in Levittown homes elsewhere.

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Bluebook (online)
207 A.2d 314, 44 N.J. 70, 1965 N.J. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schipper-v-levitt-sons-inc-nj-1965.