Slayton v. Wright

271 Cal. App. 2d 219, 76 Cal. Rptr. 494, 34 Cal. Comp. Cases 709, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 2373
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1969
DocketCiv. 9031
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 271 Cal. App. 2d 219 (Slayton v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slayton v. Wright, 271 Cal. App. 2d 219, 76 Cal. Rptr. 494, 34 Cal. Comp. Cases 709, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 2373 (Cal. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

September 14, 1963, the plaintiff, Mamie J. Slayton, and two co-employees of LaVida Mineral Springs, Nina Lackey and Robert V. Pague, sustained severe personal injuries when a water heater exploded in the main building of the health resort. The three employees filed separate actions for damages and named the following persons and firms as defendants: Gaffers & Sattler, Inc., the manufacturer of the Mission Heater which exploded; Claude Williamson, the plumbing contractor who supplied and was responsible for the installation of the heater; appellant, Owen Wright, a plumber who was in Williamson’s employ in December 1957, when the heater was ordered, and who performed the actual installation work; Carrier Corporation, the manufacturer of another water heating unit located in the basement of -LaVida Mineral Springs, known in the trade as a Day & Night Heater; and Wright & Eekart, a partnership composed of the appellant Owen Wright and Richard Eekart, the firm which supplied and installed the Day & Night Heater in December I960. However, Carrier Corporation was dismissed as a defendant before the commencement of trial.

Plaintiff’s spouse, Norman Slayton, joined in her suit against the purported third party tortfeasors and claimed damages for loss of his wife’s services.

LaVida’s workmen’s compensation carrier, Guarantee Insurance Co., sought reimbursement from the third parties for benefits paid the three employees. It filed eomplaints-inintervention in the Lackey and Pague suits and a separate action for benefits paid to Mamie J. Slayton. The employees’ actions were predicated on negligence and strict liability. The defendants raised the concurrent negligence of the employer LaVida as an affirmative defense in each of the four actions.

The employees’ actions and Guarantee’s separate subrogation suit were consolidated for jury trial. Special verdict forms were submitted to the jury for a specific finding as to whether the employer, LaVida, was negligent and whether such negligence was a proximate cause of the explosion. The jury found that LaVida was concurrently negligent, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of the injuries and damages sustained by the three employees.

The jury returned verdicts against the plumbing contractor Williamson and his former employee Wright in the following *225 sums: Mamie J. Slayton—$250,000; Norman Slayton— $50,000; Nina Lackey—$100,000; and Robert V. Pague—■ $10,000. The jury found in favor of the defendants Gaffers & Sattler, Inc. and Wright and Eekart, a copartnership. In accordance with the findings contained in the special verdicts, Guarantee, LaVida’s subrogee, took nothing.

Prior to rendition of the verdicts, counsel stipulated that all benefits paid by Guarantee to the time of trial could be deducted from the employees’ verdicts. The following sums had been expended for compensation and medical costs: Mamie J. Slayton—$32,173.22; Nina Lackey—$22,677.65; and Robert V. Pague—$2,023.07. In the judgment on the verdicts, the court deducted the aforesaid sums from the awards in favor of the three employees. The net awards were: Mamie J. Slayton—$217,826.78; Nina Lackey-—$77,322.35 ; and Robert V. Pague—$7,976.93. Subsequently, on motions for new trial filed by defendants Williamson and Wright, the court reduced the verdict in Norman Slayton’s favor to $10,000.

This appeal from the judgment in favor of Mamie J. Slay-ton, Norman Slayton, Nina Lackey and Robert V. Pague is taken solely by Owen Wright. Williamson filed a notice of appeal but failed to perfect his appeal.

The water heating system located in the basement of the main building at LaVida Mineral Springs consisted of a 530-gallon storage tank with a Day & Night Heater at one end and a smaller Mission Heater at the other end. Two 1%-inch galvanized pipelines connected each heater to the storage tank. The bottom pipleines were utilized for cold water running from the tank to the heaters, and the top pipelines were for hot water running back from the heaters to the tank. A gate valve was located on each pipeline between the tank and the heaters. Thus, each heater had two gate valves. When both valves were closed, the water in the heater became isolated or “trapped.” Operation of the Mission Heater was controlled by a probe-type thermostat located in the storage tank, with two aluminum lines running from the thermostat to the bottom of the heater where the pilot control was located.

The water heating system was originally installed in 1927 when the buildings were constructed. The source of the water was an underground reservoir located about 14 mile from the resort. The temperature of mineral waters in the reservoir was approximately 112 degrees, and to maintain this temperature during use, and to allow for “lost” heat in traveling the %- *226 mile line to the storage tank, the thermostats in the heating system were set at 140-160 degrees. After the water- was heated, it was then piped to the resort’s bath house and hotel rooms for use.

The Mission Heater was sold by Williamson to LaVida,in December 1957. Williamson directed the appellant to install the unit. Neither the manufacturer nor supplier ever equipped the heater involved with a temperature pressure relief unit—a safety device which releases excessive steam when water becomes overheated and exceeds the. boiling point of 212 degrees Fahrenheit. A thermostat in-the storage tank . controlled the burners in the Mission unit but .the evidence reflects that a thermostat may “stick” and not “cut off” the burners at the setting point.

In 1958 Williamson sold his plumbing business to appellant and Richard Eckart, and the latter parties formed a partnership. In December 1960 LaVida purchased a Day & Night Heater from the partnership. Appellant installed this unit at the other end of the basement as a replacement for an -old heater. No temperature pressure relief valve was placed on the new unit, although the new heater was equipped with two thermostats. In addition to installing the new heater, the 1%-inch lines from the Day & Night Heater to the storage tank were replaced, and in removing the old lines, Wright, observed that the insides were built up with mineral deposits to the extent that he could barely get, one finger into the pipes. He called this to the resort manager’s attention..-

In April 1963, six months before the explosion, trouble developed in the Mission Heater. The burners would not go on. Wright’s partner, Eckart, responded'to a call from LaVida to repair the unit. The thermostat in the storage tank, which was connected with the Mission Heater and actuated the Mission’s burners, was apparently defective. The storage tank thermostat was known as a Titan BT 40. .Eckar.t attempted to order a new Titan Thermostat from the supplier. The supplier told Eckart he would have' to see the old thermostat to fill the order. Eckart removed a Grayson. Thermostat from an old domestic heater he had on hand and. .which he intended to scrap. He returned to LaVida, .removed the Titan Thermostat from the storage tank and installed the old Gray-son Thermostat as a substitute. The probe of the Titan was approximately 8 inches; that on the old Grayson was only. 4 inches. The Titan was sent to the supplier. ■ Approximately two weeks before the explosion, the old Titan was returned to *227

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 Cal. App. 2d 219, 76 Cal. Rptr. 494, 34 Cal. Comp. Cases 709, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 2373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slayton-v-wright-calctapp-1969.