Toups v. Sears, Roebuck and Co., Inc.

507 So. 2d 809, 55 U.S.L.W. 2704
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 18, 1987
Docket86-C-2493
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 507 So. 2d 809 (Toups v. Sears, Roebuck and Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toups v. Sears, Roebuck and Co., Inc., 507 So. 2d 809, 55 U.S.L.W. 2704 (La. 1987).

Opinion

507 So.2d 809 (1987)

Emerza S. TOUPS and Richard S. Toups, Sr., Individually and as Parents, Administrators and Natural Tutors of Their Minor Son, Shawn M. Toups
v.
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND COMPANY, INC., et al.

No. 86-C-2493.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

May 18, 1987.
Rehearing Denied June 18, 1987.

*810 John McCann, James McCann, McCann & McCann, Salvador Cusimano, Charles Verderame, Thomas L. Giraud, Giraud, Cusimano & Verderame, New Orleans, for applicant.

Lawrence Ernst, Christovich & Kearney, John Combe, Jr., Madeleine Fischer, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, New Orleans, for respondent.

WATSON, Justice.

Plaintiffs[1] seek damages for second and third degree burns covering about fifty percent of a three year old boy's body. The injuries resulted from a flash fire emanating from a Sears' hot water heater.[2] Plaintiffs' strict product liability action rests on two premises: failure to warn of the water heater's suction effect on flammable vapors; and/or failure to adopt an *811 alternative design. A jury determined that the hot water heater was not defective but did not make specific findings about adequate warning or the feasibility of alternative designs. The court of appeal affirmed dismissal of plaintiffs' suit,[3] and a writ was granted to consider the judgment.[4]

FACTS

The accident occurred on August 17, 1977, at 1728 Frenchmen Street, New Orleans, Louisiana. Mrs. Marion Spatafora, the grandmother of the injured child, Shawn M. Toups, owned a raised shotgun double house with an eight by eight foot shed or lean-to in the rear. Shawn's grandmother, mother, half sister, Denise Henderson, and a twelve year old brother, Richard Toups, Jr., lived together in onehalf of the double house.

The shelter which was attached to the rear of the house contained a hot water heater. The water heater was less than a year old and had been purchased by Mrs. Spatafora at Sears in October of 1976. At the time it was sold, Sears anticipated that it could be installed in a shed adjacent to a residence.

The house was approximately three feet above ground. The back shed had a slanted roof: one side was open; the other two were partially enclosed with louvered shutters, many of which had missing slats. The area was well ventilated. The hot water heater was installed two inches off the concrete floor in a corner next to the rear wall of the house. Being subject to weather, wind, and dirt, it was dented, scratched and dirty. An old lawnmower was in another corner of the shed, about three feet from the hot water heater. The mower's handle was burned in the fire, and its plastic gasoline storage tank destroyed. A gasoline can was in the lean-to, as well as an old armoire and a small wooden dresser. The gasoline can, which was used to fill the lawnmower, was scorched on one side by the fire. It was on the far side of the lawn mower about six feet away from the hot water heater. Usually stored on a high shelf, the gasoline can was on the floor of the shed after the accident.

After an early dinner, Shawn Toups went outside to fetch his tricycle from the back shed. When the hot water was turned on inside the house for the dinner dishes, the burner under the hot water heater ignited, it sucked in gasoline vapors, and an explosive fire occurred. Florence Condon, a guest for dinner, said that when the hot water was turned on they heard a "poofing" type of sound.[5] Shawn was severely burned. No one witnessed the accident. Two neighbors, Mr. Lenoir and Mr. Lombas, put out most of the flames before the fire department arrived.

Richard Toups, Jr. was not at home when the accident occurred. After cutting the grass that morning, he had left with a friend. The lawnmower, which had to be carried in and out of the shed, had been replaced at the opposite end of the shed from the hot water heater. Mrs. Toups had never used the lawnmower, and her only contact with the gasoline can was to take her older son to the service station to purchase gasoline. She knew there was an open flame inside the heater and gasoline is dangerous. She was not aware that it is gasoline vapors rather than the gasoline itself which presents the greatest danger. To her knowledge, the gas can and the lawnmower were not hazardous unless they were adjacent to the hot water heater.

Steven Lenoir lived in the other side of the double house. While watching television, he heard a small explosive sound, similar to that of a muffled fire cracker. Later, learning there was a fire next door, he jumped the fence, and found Mr. Lombas with a hose in his hand. Glancing around, he saw a charred lawnmower and a five gallon gas can on the floor.

Dr. Frank Charles DiVincenti, medical director of the burn unit at Charity, testified that Shawn Toups had a forty to fifty percent burn involving his face, arms, and legs. The leg burns went completely *812 around the extremities. The feet of the patient were badly burned and apparently had received an intense amount of heat. The doctor did not recall the soles of the boy's feet or his palms being burned.

Shawn's palms and chest were completely free of burn damage.[6] The soles of his feet were also undamaged.[7] Shawn told his sister Denise and the head nurse in the Charity Hospital burn unit that the hot water heater burned him.

The fire was reported at 7:13 in the evening. Captain Milton E. Dauterive of the New Orleans Fire Department said the fire occurred as the result of fuel accidentally spilled or released from a gasoline lawnmower. According to his testimony, the lawnmower was approximately three feet from the water heater, being closer to the water heater than the gasoline can which was on the far side of the mower. The gasoline can was possibly six feet from the water heater. The lawnmower and gas can were scorched and the only thing actually burning when the firemen arrived were the weather boards on the back of the house. The gasoline can was sitting upright; the base of the lawnmower was burned; the tank of the lawnmower was completely destroyed; and there was evidence that gasoline had spilled and run under the water heater where the vapors ignited to cause the flash fire. In Captain Dauterive's opinion, the fire was caused by improper storage of gasoline in the same area as the water heater.

According to the investigating police officer, Patrolman Randy Leitz, the gas can in the shed had a cap on it with a hole, but no nozzle.

Leonard C. Mandell is a consulting engineer and forensic scientist who specializes in fire safety. Highly qualified by education and experience, Mandell testified as an expert in the fields of mechanical engineering, forensic science and safety engineering. These specialities include thermal fire combustion, heating, and ventilation.

According to Mandell, any evaporation from the gas can would have been insufficient to cause the fire and the can's burn markings were inconsistent with it being the source of the fire. In his expert opinion, the gasoline can was not a factor in the fire. Since the air intake to the heater is at floor level, air is sucked up into the heater when the main burner comes on. Gasoline vapor, which is invisible, is four times heavier than air and falls very quickly to the ground. The plastic temperature regulating knob on the water heater had been exposed to a flash flame for a few seconds. In Mandell's opinion, the ignition source came from the base of the hot water heater.

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Bluebook (online)
507 So. 2d 809, 55 U.S.L.W. 2704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toups-v-sears-roebuck-and-co-inc-la-1987.