56 S.E.2d 140 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1949
1. "A company which produces and furnishes gas is bound to use such skill and diligence in its operations as is proportionate to the delicacy, difficulty and nature of that particular business."
2. Whether or not the deceased exercised the care and caution necessary for her own safety, in attempting to light the pilot light on the gas hot water heater is, under the facts alleged, a question for the jury.
It appearing from the petition that the plaintiff was the only child of Mrs. Katherine Russell Davis, who was a widow on June 16, 1949, when she died; that at the time the plaintiff's father built his home in Valdosta, the defendant installed a gas hot water heater in the basement of said house; that since then the defendant has serviced it from time to time up to and including 1949; that the deceased mother called on the defendant to make certain repairs and adjustments to said heater to prevent the pilot light thereof from going out; that the defendant, through its agents, during the first six months of 1949, did make repairs to and adjustments of the pilot light on said hot water heater; that the names of defendant's servants and employees who serviced and repaired the said hot water heater at the times herein mentioned are unknown to the plaintiff, but are well known to the defendant, and are peculiarly within its knowledge; that the exact nature of the repairs and service to said gas hot water heater as made by the defendant's servants, agents, and employees are unknown to the plaintiff, but well known to the defendant; that on June 15, 1949, around 10:30 a. m., the deceased, while in the exercise of due care and caution for her own safety, discovered that the pilot light on the gas hot water heater was not working and she turned the control lever to the "off" position, opened the basement window, went up the steps to the main floor, leaving the basement door open and opened most, if not all of the windows located on the first and second floors; that she waited at least 15 minutes and then re-entered the basement and struck a match and attempted to light the pilot light, but due to the defective condition of the water heater, so much gas had escaped and had accumulated in the basement and under the house that a violent explosion occurred as a result *379 of which the house was severely damaged, and Mrs. Katherine Russell Davis was fatally burned, which caused her death on the next day, June 16th; that the proximate cause of the explosion, and of the resulting death of the plaintiff's mother was the defendant's negligence, same including, but was not necessarily limited to the following: (a) That the defendant, through its agents employed in its repair and service department, had actual knowledge of the defective condition of the heater and had attempted to repair these defects but had failed to do so; (b) that the defendant failed to maintain a steady pressure of gas, as a result of which same would become so low during the hours of the day when gas was being heavily used that not enough gas would pass through the pilot light to support a flame, resulting in same becoming extinguished, but the gas would continue to flow through the pilot light and accumulate in the basement where the hot water heater was located, and in increasing volume during the time when there was not a heavy drain on the gas by other users; (c) that the defendant, since installing this heater, changed the type of gas that it was providing its customers, including the deceased, from a type that was lighter than air to a type that had different qualities, including that of being heavier than air; that the defendant failed to warn the deceased of the consequences of the change; (d) that the defendant, since such change in type of gas provided, failed to alter or remove a sign containing instructions of caution, which sign was attached to the door of the gas hot water heater and instructed the user as to what action to take in the event the pilot light should become extinguished, this sign instructing the user to place the gas control lever in the "off" position and to wait at least three minutes before attempting to light the pilot light; and that by reason of the foregoing facts the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff for the full value of the life of her mother, $75,000.
The trial judge overruled the defendant's general demurrer and to this judgment the defendant excepts. There is but one question for decision by this court, and that is conceded to be whether the plaintiff's petition sets forth a cause of action in the plaintiff's favor to recover *380 damages from the defendant gas company for the death of the plaintiff's mother. The plaintiff alleged that her mother was fatally burned on June 15, 1949, when she attempted to light the pilot light of a gas hot water heater installed by the defendant and serviced by it, and for which the defendant furnished the gas burned therein, and that she, by reason of such burns, died on the following day. The court below overruled the general demurrer interposed by the defendant to this petition.
The defendant gas company contends that the court erred in overruling its demurrer in that, construing this petition most strongly against the plaintiff (Evans v. Dickey,
The controlling questions here, as in the Johnson case, supra, are whether the petition shows on its face that the plaintiff's mother failed to exercise ordinary care for her own safety in seeking to light the pilot light on the gas hot water heater in the basement of her home, and whether the alleged negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the injury to the *381
plaintiff's mother. In connection with the rules of law and practice relied upon by the defendant (Moore v. SeaboardAir-Line Railway Company,
Whether or not the plaintiff's mother was lacking in ordinary care, in seeking to light the pilot light to this heater, after turning the control lever to "off" and opening the windows and doors, not for three minutes as required by the defendant's instructions on a sign placed on the door of the heater, but for fifteen minutes, is for the jury, and this court will not, on demurrer, decide that question as a matter of law. See Powers
v. Atlanta Gas-Light Co.,
After a careful examination of the Johnson case and the facts therein, and of the facts appearing in the present case, we have failed to find any material difference between the facts in the two cases. It is true that the defendant claims that there is a difference and that this difference is material and shows that the plaintiff's mother was not in the exercise of due care for her own safety when she struck the match and the explosion took place. The defendant company contends that "from the allegations of the petition, Mrs. Davis discovered the presence of escaped gas and opened the doors and windows throughout the house," and she "was aware of the presence of escaped gas in large quantities," and "was aware of the defective condition of the hot water heater." The plaintiff alleged that the "deceased while in the exercise of due care and caution for her own safety, discovered *382 that the pilot light on said gas water heater was not working and turned the control lever to the `off' position, opened the basement window, went up the steps to the main floor leaving the basement door open and opened most, if not all, of the windows located on the first and second floors of said house; that she waited a period of at least 15 minutes and then re-entered the basement and struck a match and attempted to light the pilot light. However, due to the defective condition of said gas hot water heater, so much gas had escaped and had accumulated in the basement and under the house that a violent explosion occurred, as a result of which the said house was severely damaged and Mrs. Katherine Russell Davis was fatally burned." One of the grounds of negligence alleged by the plaintiff was that after changing the type of gas used, the defendant "failed to alter or even remove a sign containing instructions of caution which sign was attached to the door of said gas hot water heater and instructed the user as to what action to take in the event the pilot light should become extinguished, said sign instructing the user to place the gas control lever in the `off' position and to wait at least three minutes before attempting to light the pilot light." It appears from the petition that although the plaintiff's mother more than complied with these instructions as to what to do when the pilot light went out, that she not only turned the lever to "off" but waited 15 minutes instead of three minutes, and opened most, if not all, windows and doors. In these circumstances, this court, under the ruling in Atlanta Gas Light Co. v. Johnson, supra, and the decisions therein dealt with and relied upon, does not concur in the contention of the defendant company, as expressed in its brief in this court, that "from the facts alleged in the petition, it clearly appears that the death of the plaintiff's mother was the result of her own carelessness and that by the exercise of ordinary care she could have avoided the consequences of any negligence of which the defendant may have been guilty."
We have examined the case of Weyman v. Maynard,
It follows that the trial judge did not err in overruling the defendant's general demurrer.
Judgment affirmed. MacIntyre, P. J., and Townsend, J., concur.