Sorensen v. DeFranco

2013 Ohio 5829
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 2013
Docket2013-L-038
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2013 Ohio 5829 (Sorensen v. DeFranco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sorensen v. DeFranco, 2013 Ohio 5829 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as Sorensen v. DeFranco, 2013-Ohio-5829.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

LAKE COUNTY, OHIO

ROBERT L. SORENSEN, : OPINION

Plaintiff-Appellant, : CASE NO. 2013-L-038 - vs - :

ORLANDO DEFRANCO, et al., :

Defendant-Appellee. :

Civil Appeal from the Lake County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 12 CV 000463.

Judgment: Affirmed.

Earl F. Ghaster, Kubyn & Ghaster, 8373 Mentor Avenue, Mentor, OH 44060 (For Plaintiff-Appellant).

James T. Tyminski, Jr., Stephen M. Beaudry, and Holly Olarczuk-Smith, Gallagher Sharp, Sixth Floor, Bulkley Building, 1501 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44115 (For Defendant-Appellee).

COLLEEN MARY O’TOOLE, J.

{¶1} Appellant, Robert L. Sorensen, appeals from the April 8, 2013 judgment of

the Lake County Court of Common Pleas, granting appellee, Orlando DeFranco’s,

motion for summary judgment.

{¶2} Fifty-nine-year-old Sorensen, a California resident, and 82-year-old

DeFranco, an Ohioan, had been friends for 30 years. DeFranco, now deceased, was

the owner of a home in Concord Township, Lake County, Ohio. Sorensen, a self- described “beach bum,” would stay at DeFranco’s residence whenever visiting Ohio.

DeFranco allowed Sorensen to borrow his car and never charged Sorensen any rent

during his stay.

{¶3} On one occasion, Sorensen stayed at DeFranco’s home while DeFranco

vacationed in Las Vegas. Sorensen agreed to house-sit and watch DeFranco’s two

dogs, without compensation. On October 18, 2010, at around 6:00 p.m., Sorensen felt

a chill in the air and turned on the furnace at the thermostat. The furnace had not been

used since the previous spring.

{¶4} According to Sorensen, about an hour later, the house became too hot

and he opened the front door for some fresh air. Around 10:45 p.m., Sorensen arose

from lying on the couch and felt dizzy. He attributed his dizziness to low blood sugar

due to his diabetic condition. He walked to the kitchen to get something to eat, passed

out, fell, broke his left leg, and tore the medial meniscus of his left knee.

{¶5} When Sorensen came to, he realized he needed to get out of the house

and began crawling. He vomited in the living room. Sorensen was able to call

DeFranco’s daughter, Elizabeth, who called 9-1-1. Sorensen crawled outside, but

because it was too cold, he crawled back indoors.

{¶6} The fire department and paramedics arrived, finding Sorensen semi-

conscious in the living room. First responders noticed a strong smell of natural gas and

their eyes burned when they entered DeFranco’s home. Positive readings for carbon

monoxide were detected throughout the residence.

{¶7} Sorensen was transported to the hospital, treated for carbon monoxide

poisoning, and underwent surgery on his leg. Sorensen’s relationship with DeFranco

2 after the incident was not damaged. In fact, he later stayed with DeFranco’s daughter

while recovering.

{¶8} Although the fire report indicates that the furnace inspection showed a

“deteriorated condition,” no firemen could explain who made that statement or why it

was made. The fireman who authored the report neither went in the basement, where

the furnace was located, nor looked at the furnace. Two other firemen, who went in the

basement, looked at the furnace and monitored it for carbon monoxide. They did not

disassemble the furnace. Using helmet lights, they saw some darkness inside the

furnace, which may have been soot. However, neither fireman was a furnace expert

and could not comment on whether the furnace was well-maintained.

{¶9} The fire department never determined the cause of the carbon monoxide

leak and never attributed it to a lack of furnace maintenance. No photographs of the

furnace were taken. DeFranco was not charged in connection with the leak.

{¶10} According to DeFranco, he had a carbon monoxide detector mounted on

his kitchen wall but the alarm did not sound because his son, Tom, did not replace the

batteries. DeFranco was not aware that the detector was not working properly until

after the incident at issue. DeFranco had the furnace newly installed when he moved

into his home in 1992. It had been checked and inspected at various times. He never

had any significant problems with the furnace. Besides air filters routinely replaced

twice a year, DeFranco had the thermocouple wire replaced in 2000, and a new

thermostat installed at another time.

{¶11} Just a few months before the incident, DeFranco’s friend, Richard Zurbola,

replaced the air filter. Zurbola did not notice any visible defects or deterioration of the

3 furnace at the time. DeFranco stated he had no reason to believe that there was

anything wrong with his furnace or that it was going to leak carbon monoxide.

{¶12} As DeFranco was still in Las Vegas, his son hired Bryon McCroskey, a

general handyman of McCroskey Remodeling & Repairs, to replace the furnace.

According to McCroskey, he has installed approximately 300 to 400 furnaces during his

career. A reveal of the exterior looked okay and it was not in bad shape. It took

McCroskey an hour to take DeFranco’s furnace apart in order to determine that it had a

cracked heat exchanger which caused the carbon monoxide leak. Both DeFranco and

Sorensen agreed that the carbon monoxide poisoning resulted from the cracked heat

exchanger. McCroskey explained that the problem was not detectable by just

examining the outside of the furnace, even during a routine inspection by a furnace

company. Thus, McCroskey stated that a homeowner, like DeFranco, would not have

known that his furnace had a cracked heat exchanger without taking the furnace apart.

{¶13} On February 22, 2012, Sorensen filed a complaint against DeFranco

essentially claiming that DeFranco was negligent for failing to have his furnace

professionally inspected annually with carbon monoxide testing and for failing to have

an operable carbon monoxide detector in his home. DeFranco filed an answer on April

3, 2012.

{¶14} On December 18, 2012, DeFranco filed a motion for summary judgment

arguing that Ohio case and statutory law does not impose a duty upon homeowners to

have their furnaces inspected annually for carbon monoxide or to have a working

carbon monoxide detector. Sorensen filed a brief in opposition, and submitted an

affidavit and report from his expert, James Madden, a licensed professional engineer,

4 who opined that the incident was proximately caused by the negligent action and

inaction of DeFranco. Madden opined that a potential cause of the carbon monoxide

leakage was either a cracked heat exchanger and/or a leak through an un-taped flue

pipe. By the time that Madden entered the case, however, DeFranco’s old furnace had

been scrapped and replaced with a new one. DeFranco subsequently filed a reply.

{¶15} Thereafter, DeFranco passed away from cancer. His counsel filed a

suggestion of death on February 15, 2013.

{¶16} On April 8, 2013, the trial court granted DeFranco’s motion for summary

judgment. Sorensen timely appealed and asserts the following four assignments of

error:

{¶17} “[1.] The trial court erred to the prejudice of Appellant by granting

summary judgment in favor of the Appellee by requiring a corresponding statutory duty

in order to maintain a negligence cause of action and ignoring the common law duties

established by Ohio law.

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