" Y" PROPANE SERVICE, INC. v. Garcia

61 S.W.3d 559, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 5488, 2001 WL 912881
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 15, 2001
Docket04-99-00880-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 61 S.W.3d 559 (" Y" PROPANE SERVICE, INC. v. Garcia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
" Y" PROPANE SERVICE, INC. v. Garcia, 61 S.W.3d 559, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 5488, 2001 WL 912881 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

Opinion by:

SARAH B. DUNCAN, Justice.

After a jury found “Y” Propane responsible for a gas explosion that resulted in property damage and the death of Francisco Garcia, the trial court rendered judgment against “Y” Propane for an amount in excess of six million dollars. “Y” Propane appeals, contending the evidence is insufficient. to support the jury’s verdict and the trial court erred in denying its motion to equalize the peremptory challenges. We hold the evidence is legally sufficient, but the trial court erred in denying “Y” Propane’s motion to equalize. We therefore reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.

Factual and Procedukal Background

In late 1996, Amando Peña, Sr. suggested that one of his employees, Francisco Garcia, move with his family to the smaller of two houses located on Peña’s Los More-nos Ranch in Starr County. Approximately one year after the move, on December 7, 1997, Garcia suffered fatal injuries when an accumulation of propane in the house exploded. Shortly after the explosion, Garcia’s widow, Maria, and his children sued “Y” Propane for negligently causing Garcia’s death.

The facts surrounding the explosion are not in substantial controversy. When Garcia and his friend, Lionel Miranda, walked into the house, they smelled a strong gas odor. Garcia noticed that the rubber supply hose to the propane stove had been damaged by mice or a rat, so he went outside to shut off the valve on the 150-gallon propane tank behind the house. When he returned, he opened the refrigerator to remove two soft drinks. Moments after the refrigerator cycled on, the propane exploded.

The parties’ experts agreed that a leak in the rubber hose had caused a substantial accumulation of propane, which was ignited when the refrigerator motor cycled on. The experts further agreed the configuration of the Garcias’ propane tank and supply lines on the day of the explosion violated Texas Railroad Commission regulations in several particulars. The tank was approximately four to five feet closer to the house than the regulations permitted; the exterior copper supply line was not buried, as the regulations required; and the interior supply line was an automotive rubber hose secured by a radiator clamp, not the flexible hose designed specifically for LP-gas use and required by the regulations.

The parties and their witnesses also agreed that supplying gas to a propane installation that violated the regulations constituted negligence. According to Peña, “only T’ Propane” had delivered propane to his propane tanks in Starr County. Thus, the dispute at trial focused upon whether “Y” Propane had delivered gas to the Garcias’ propane installation when it was configured in violation of the regulations. On this issue, the evidence conflicted sharply.

[563]*563According to Francisco Garcia’s widow, Maria, and his son, Ubaldo, the same 150-gallon tank that was found behind their home on the day of the explosion had been at that location since they moved into the house. Ubaldo Garcia also testified the supply lines had always been as they appeared on the day of the explosion. The Garcias also called Rodolfo Ojeda to testify. Ojeda, who worked for Peña’s wrecker service, stated that the gate at Los More-nos was kept locked; and, when no one else was available, he was called to let people in. Although he first testified he let the “Y” Propane driver in the Los Morenos gate only once, less than a year before the explosion, he later stated he let the “Y” Propane driver into Los Morenos twice. The visits were approximately one month apart. During the first visit, the driver said the larger tank at the big house was “no good” and refused to fill it. For that reason, Peña instructed Ojeda to find another tank. Ojeda found an empty tank at another of Peña’s ranches and took it to Los Morenos. Ojeda left the tank by and intended it for use at the big house. But the tank was at the smaller house by the time the “Y” Propane driver made his second visit, a few months before the explosion. On that visit, he only partially filled the tank because, he told Ojeda, there was a small leak. Ojeda testified he signed the receipt for this delivery.

The Garcias’ and Ojeda’s testimony was squarely controverted by “Y” Propane’s driver in Starr County, Jose Molina. According to Molina, he was called to Los Morenos on June 4, 1997 to fill a 150-gallon tank located near the big house. Ojeda opened the gate for him. Molina put seventy-five gallons in the tank by the big house. As he was leaving, a man came out of the smaller house and told Ojeda he also needed gas. The tank connected to the smaller house was a 250-gallon tank that was approximately fifteen to twenty feet away from the smaller house and licensed by La Grande. Molina found a loose knob on the tank and tightened it. He then checked the buried copper fine running from the tank to the exterior wall of the house and the flexible metal hose running from the interior wall to the stove. When everything checked out, he put only twenty-five gallons in the tank because the man told him he was only going to be there a little while. The man then signed the delivery receipt. According to Molina, this was his only delivery to Los Morenos.

The record contains a receipt signed by Garcia and Molina for the delivery of 100 gallons of propane to Los Morenos on June 4, 1997. The record also contains thirteen other receipts for propane deliveries, all delivered by ‘Y” Propane or its predecessor to Amando Peña and his company, Beefmasters:

Invoice Number Date # Gallons Signatures

14006 12/21/96 800 Molina; Ojeda

14293 01/16/97 700 Molina; Rufio Sandoval

5101 02/28/97 185 Molina; Ojeda

5110 03/03/97 575 Molina; Rufio Sandoval

50313 03/19/97 825 [no signature];Ojeda

8347 04/07/97 845 Molina; Ojeda

9887 05/16/97 700 Molina; Rufio Sandoval

10623 06/04/97 100 Molina; Garcia

11146 06/16/97 750 “TA”; Rufio Sandoval

10722 07/01/97 600 Molina; Ojeda

11574 07/30/97 850 Molina; Ojeda

13562 09/05/97 800 Molina; Ojeda

13082 10/22/97 845 Molina; Rufio Sandoval

15109 11/13/97 400 Molina; Miguel Acurillo

[564]*564None of the receipts indicate the location or locations to which the propane was delivered.

According to Molina, he returned to Los Morenos shortly after the explosion to investigate. The tank that had been connected to the Garcias’ home on the day of the explosion was not the tank Molina had filled on June 4; nor was this tank configured as the tank had been on June 4. Shortly after his return visit to Los More-nos, on January 14, 1998, Molina’s employment was terminated. Although he initially stated his employment was terminated because “it was slow,” he later agreed that he was terminated because he was “slacking off.” At the time of his deposition, Molina was imprisoned on a drug charge.

“Y” Propane’s expert witnesses, Eduardo Sanchez and Sammy Russo, agreed with Molina that the 150-gallon tank connected to the small house at the time of the explosion was not the tank to which Molina delivered twenty-five gallons of propane on June 4, 1997. These witnesses based their conclusions on Molina’s testimony in part.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 S.W.3d 559, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 5488, 2001 WL 912881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/y-propane-service-inc-v-garcia-texapp-2001.