Trent v. Sellers

563 P.2d 1106, 1 Kan. App. 2d 267, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedApril 29, 1977
Docket48,295
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 563 P.2d 1106 (Trent v. Sellers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trent v. Sellers, 563 P.2d 1106, 1 Kan. App. 2d 267, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 156 (kanctapp 1977).

Opinion

Spencer, J.:

This is an action for damages resulting from a fire which completely destroyed the building and contents of the K-32 Bowl (a bowling alley) owned and operated by plaintiff in Wyandotte County. Judgment was entered for plaintiff and defendants have appealed.

The building in which plaintiff’s business was conducted was approximately 75 feet by 135 feet in dimension. It was of masonry construction and contained twelve bowling lanes together with all necessary equipment to operate the enterprise. Plaintiff had operated his bowling alley at this location since August, 1959. On April 8, 1971, the date of the fire, the business was being managed by John Enderle and his wife Dorothy as employees of the plaintiff.

The defendants, doing business as Midwest Bowling Equip *268 ment Company, had been employed by the plaintiff to recoat the twelve bowling lanes at K-32 Bowl, such work to be performed on or about April 8, 1971. Recoating is accomplished by first cleaning the lanes with a solvent, in this instance Chloronite Solvent 8, applied to a towel which is then laid on the foul line and pushed and pulled the entire length of the lane. This procedure requires about one and one-half minutes for each-of the alleys. After the cleaning process, a lacquer is applied to each lane. In this case two five-gallon cans of Dura-Lastic Bowling Lane Finish No. 505 were used. Each can has a cover with a spout and seal. The cap is unscrewed, the seal removed, and the lacquer is poured into what is referred to as a pour can, after which one person takes the applicator, described as a sheepskin on a piece of metal approximately forty-four inches wide, and another takes the container of lacquer. Commencing at the pin deck the finish is applied as one pours the finish in front of the applicator being pulled by the other. The applicator is dragged onto protective paper placed at the foul line in a manner permitting the entire lane surface to be covered, but which will avoid any of the finish on the approaches. The solvent used in cleaning the lanes will not burn but the lacquer finish is a highly inflammable compound, carrying a flashpoint of fifty-nine degrees Fahrenheit. The procedures used are approved by the American Bowling Congress and are commonly used in the industry. The procedures followed by the defendants in applying these products are the accepted procedures and are substantially the procedures used by the defendants in the process of recoating the lanes at K-32 Bowl “about a dozen times” between the year 1960 and the date of the fire.

In addition to his testimony concerning damages, the fact that he had hired John Enderle and his wife Dorothy to operate the bowling alley for him, and that he had not been in the bowling alley for about one week before the fire occurred, the plaintiff testified as follows:

“The lanes at the K-32 Bowl were resurfaced at least five times. The supplies used to clean and buff the alleyways were purchased from Mr. Octavio and Mr. Sellers and they were the individuals that regularly resurfaced and recoated the alley lanes. At no time did I object to Mr. Sellers and Mr. Octavio using what has been admitted as plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 and 2, Chloronite Solvent 8 and Dura-Lastic Bowling Lane Finish No. 505. In my opinion, plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 and 2 are the products that are used in a majority of bowling alleys in the country for cleaning and resurfacing procedures. It would at least be one of the major brands used.”

*269 The defendant Sellers testified that on the night of April 8, 1971, he had arrived at the K-32 Bowl alone in his truck in which he was carrying the materials and equipment to do the job; that when he arrived he carried the materials into the building and at that time Craig Spillman and John Enderle were there and there were thrée or four others inside playing pool. He immediately raised the masking, pushed the pins into the pit in back of the alleys, and proceeded with the cleaning process. He did not touch anything relating to any electrical outlets or electrical currents, nor did he take the plug-ins out of the pinsetters to render them inoperative, as those plug-ins were “cut off in front.” He stated also that he and his partner expected the bowling alley operator or manager to have the building in condition to commence the recoating process, the manager being the one with knowledge as to where the electrical controls were located; and that the building and equipment were under the manager’s control. Also, that it is normal and customary in the industry for the building operator or owner to have the building and equipment inside in a condition safe and ready for the recoating procedure; and that on the night of the fire at the K-32 Bowl, he and his partner relied on Mr. Enderle to have the building in a safe condition for them to do their work. He stated also that the electricity to the pinsetters and equipment had been turned off by Mr. Enderle at the control in the office area near the cash register. This defendant proceeded with the cleaning process and, at the time the defendant Octavio arrived, had cleaned six or eight lanes. His testimony was that after they had finished applying the lacquer to lane 12 he carried the applicator and some other equipment to his truck. He then returned to the building and made one more trip to the truck, taking with him the bucket and the towel that had been used for the solvent. When he returned the second time and was approximately ten feet inside the front door, he heard Mr. Enderle say: “Look what is happening on alley 12? What is that on alley 12?” He then looked down in front of the headpin on alley 12 and saw a blaze on the area where they had just finished putting on the lacquer.

The defendant Octavio testified that when he arrived at the bowling alley at about 10:30 p.m. on April 8, 1971, John Enderle and a mechanic were inside the building and there were also four *270 or five others present who were playing pool. He testified that he then helped Sellers finish cleaning the lanes, taped paper down on each foul line to prevent any finish from getting on the approaches, after which they set the cans of finish on a protective cardboard. He testified also that just he and Sellers did the work and no one else assisted them in the recoating operation; that after they had finished the job on lane 12, Sellers had started removing the equipment to his truck and he (Octavio) had gone to the spectator seats in front of lane 4. At that time either Enderle or the mechanic (Spillman) asked what was on lane 12. He turned around and saw a spark of flame on lane 12 close to the pin deck. He stated that he was standing approximately seventy feet away from where he first noticed the flame in the bowling alley and that he had left the area where the flame started approximately five minutes before he saw it. The flame started on lane 12 where the lacquer finish had been applied, jumped to lane 11, to lane 10, reached the foul line, stopped and then started going back the same way. In a few seconds the whole place was full of flame and smoke. At this time the defendants still had some of their tools, the pour cans and empty buckets to remove from the building and the paper which had been taped onto the foul lines to be taken up before their job was completed.

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Bluebook (online)
563 P.2d 1106, 1 Kan. App. 2d 267, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trent-v-sellers-kanctapp-1977.