Shеlly and Fannie Weaks (“the Weaks”) appeal from the judgment of the trial court entered against them in their action for negligence against their landlords, Ronald and Marie Rupp (“the Rupps”). The ease was tried before the court without a jury. The Weaks alleged that the Rupps’ negligent maintenance of their furnace caused them to suffer carbon monoxide poisoning. The Weaks raise two issues on appeal. They contend that the trial court erred by (1) finding against them where the Rupps breached their duty to use ordinary care to рrevent the furnace in the Weaks’ apartment from emitting carbon monoxide; and (2) finding against them where the Rupps were liable under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. That part of the judgment finding that the Rupps are not liable under a theory of specific negligence is affirmed. That portion of the judgment finding for the Rupps on Plaintiffs theory of res ipsa loquitur is reversed, and the case is remanded for a new trial to determine the Rupps’ liability under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.
FACTS
Shelly Weaks and her mother, Fannie Weaks, were tenants in an apartment building owned and operated by Ronald and Marie Rupp in January 1994. The Weaks complained to the Rupps in January 1994 that the furnace in their apartment smelled of burnt wires and gas. The Rupps called Ben Baskerville, a repairmen with over forty years experience, to repair the furnace. Mr. Baskerville rewired the furnace, replaced the thermocouple and cleaned the pilot burner assembly. He did not determine what caused the wires to burn and did not work on the flue or heat exchanger. Before he left, Mr. Baskerville lit the pilоt light and turned the furnace back on to assure it was properly functioning.
Approximately one week later, on January 8,1994, Fannie awoke in the night and shouted out that she smelled gas coming from the furnace. When Shelly entered Fannie’s room she smelt a distinct odor; when she inhaled she fell forward onto the bed. Fannie was suffering loss of her motor skills, had a severe headache, was nauseous and dizzy and could barely sit on the edge of the bed. Shelly helped Fannie from the home. Before leaving the apartment, the Weaks turned off the furnace. No one in the apartment had touched the furnace since the repairs were made one week earlier.
Shelly contacted the Missouri Gas Energy Company. Galen Frank Winn, an installation and service man employed by the Missouri Gas Energy Company for the previous
Fannie and Shelly went to the University of Kansas Medical Center for medical treatment. The University of Kansas Medical Center referred the Weaks to the St. Joseph Hospital for testing. St. Joseph Hospital diagnosed both Shelly and Fannie as having carbon monoxide poisoning. Fannie’s initial tests rеvealed that she had a 30.4% pure carbon monoxide level which is indicative of serious exposure and a significant level of toxicity. At this level of toxicity, there is a progressive deterioration of neurologic function if left untreated. Because of this high level of carbon monoxide, St. Joseph Hospital required Fannie to return on January 9 for further tests. Fannie was hospitalized from January 9 to January 11, 1995. She was subjected to psychological testing, blood work, oxygen levels tests and respiratory tests. Fannie was given two treatments in the hyperbaric chamber which involved Fannie being placed on a stretcher and put inside a pressurized sealed chamber with high flow oxygen for ninety minutes per session. Fannie was upset regarding the hyperbaric chamber treatment because she becomes claustrophobic when placed in tight areas. Fannie’s total medical expenses amounted to $1228.04.
Shelly was treated and released from St. Joseph Hospital on January 8,1994. Shelly’s medical bill amounted to $143.60. Shelly missed two days work due to her carbon monoxide poisoning and lost $168.00 incоme.
After Fannie’s release from St. Joseph’s Hospital, Fannie and Shelly returned to the apartment. Fannie developed psychological problems because she was scared that she would suffer from carbon monoxide poisoning again. Fannie experienced insomnia and recurrent headaches. Shelly also experienced nervousness when sleeping and had headaches. While Shelly’s headaches eventually subsided, Fannie continued to suffer from headaches. Shelly and Fannie moved out of the apartment in February because of their fear of carbon monoxide poisoning.
The Weaks filed suit in the Jackson County Circuit Court seeking compensatory and punitive damages. At the bench trial, Robert Nielson, a heating and air conditioning technician employed by Black & Veatch Consulting Engineers for thirteen years, testified. Mr. Nielson stated a simple furnace, like the one located in the Weaks’ apartment, burns natural gas to produce heat. Heat is then blown across the heat exchange into the house. The byproducts of combustion are cаrbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and water vapor. Because carbon monoxide is poisonous and carbon dioxide is a suffocant, regular maintenance of the furnace is recommended. Mr. Nielson testified that the Weaks’ furnace had rust on it; the wires were burnt; the draft diverter was rusted and contained black soot; and the flue pipe had tape on it. Mr. Nielson stated that burnt wires indicate a flame roll-out which can be caused by a crack in the heat exchanger, a misaligned burner or a gas valve that open too slowly to let the gas ignite evenly. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court found on behalf of the Rupps. This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In a court-tried case, appellate review is governed by
Murphy v. Carron,
I. THE RUPPS ARE NOT LIABLE ON THEORY OF SPECIFIC NEGLIGENCE
As their first point on appeal, the Weaks argue that the trial court erred in finding for defendants on their claim that the Rupps are liable in negligence. The Weaks specifically argue that the Rupps had a duty to properly maintain the furnace; the Rupps breached that duty by negligently maintaining the furnace and allowing carbon monoxide fumes to enter the Weaks’ apartment; and the Rupps’ breach proximately caused them physical harm and emotional distress.
Negligence is the failure to exercise the degree of care which a reasonably prudent and careful person would use under the same or similar circumstances.
Jackson v. City of Blue Springs,
Whether the Rupps owed a duty to the Weaks is first determined. Under Missouri law, a landlord is legally obligated to maintain in a “reasonably safe condition” those portions of the rental property over which the landlord retains “control.”
Ashley v. R.D. Columbia
Assoc.,
L.P.,
The undisputed evidence establishes the furnace in the Weaks’ apartment was under the control of the Rupps. The Rupps were responsible for providing heat to the apartment. The Rupps owned and maintained all portions of the hearing mechanisms, including the furnace located in the Weaks’ apartmеnt. The Rupps provided repairs and maintenance on the furnace when necessitated. For example, when the Weaks complained that the furnace in their apartment smelled of burnt wires, the Rupps called Mr. Baskerville to repair the furnace. And when the furnace emitted carbon monoxide fumes on January 8, 1994, the Weaks hired a repairmen to repair the furnace and ascertain the source of the carbon monoxide fumes. Mr. Rupp admitted that he was in charge of the maintenance of the furnace. Becаuse the Rupps owned the furnace and retained sole responsibility for the repairs and maintenance of the furnace, the Rupps exercised “control” over the furnace and, therefore, had a duty to maintain the furnace in a reasonably safe condition.
Whether the evidence supports a finding of breach of duty and causation is next determined. The Weaks argue that the trial court erred in finding for the Rupps
Substantial evidence supports a finding that the Weaks failed to establish the requisite causal connection between the Rupps’ allegedly negligеnt maintenance of the furnace and their injuries from carbon monoxide poisoning. The evidence established that the carbon monoxide fumes emitted from the furnace; the tests performed by Mr. Winn the night the Weaks suffered from carbon monoxide poisoning indicated the presence of one percent carbon monoxide, the highest reading available on the instruments. While the evidence, therefore, established the carbon monoxide fumes emitted from the furnace, no evidence was presented to show that the Rupp’s allegedly negligent maintenance of the furnace was causally connected to the emission of the carbon monoxide fumes. For example, both Mr. Winn and Mr. Nielson stated that the flame roll out from the combustion chamber of the furnace which caused the exposed wires to bum indicated a possible cracked heat exchanger. A crack in the heat exchanger would allow carbon monoxide fumes to emit into the Weaks’ apartment. The Rupps, however, had tests done on the heat exchanger to determine if a crаck existed. A smoke bomb was placed inside the heat exchanger. No smoke emitted into the Weaks’ apartment, thereby indicating that no crack existed. Furthermore, while the Weaks note that the furnace was not inspected from 1988-1994 and the furnace pipes were rusted, the Weaks have failed to adduce any evidence establishing that either the lack of inspection or the rusting of the furnace pipes could cause carbon monoxide fumes to emit into the apartment. Because substantial evidence supports a finding that the Weaks failed to establish a causal connection between the Rupps’ allegedly negligent maintenance of the furnace, the trial court could have reasonably found that the Weaks failed to prove an actionable case of negligence. The trial court, therefore, did not err in entering judgment in favor of the Rupps. Point one is deified.
II. THE DOCTRINE OF RES IPSA LOQUITUR IS APPLICABLE
The Weaks contend as their second point on appeal that the trial court erred in finding the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur inapplicable and in not finding for them as the triеr of fact under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. The Weaks argue that application of res ipsa loquitur was proper because the Rupps owned and controlled the Weaks’ furnace, failed to properly maintain and repair the furnace, and, thereby, injured them when carbon monoxide fumes were emitted in their apartment.
The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is a rule of evidence that permits a jury to infer from circumstantial evidence that the defendant is negligent without requiring that the plaintiff prove defendant’s specifiс negligence.
Trefney v. Nat’l Super Markets, Inc.,
A party seeking the application and benefit of the doctrine of res ipsa loqui-tur need not submit facts surrounding the occurrence that exclude all reasonable hypotheses except defendant’s negligence.
Cremeens v. Kree Institute of Electrolysis, Inc.,
If the plaintiff proves the cause of the casualty, it is no longer possible to rely on a presumption of the defendant’s negligence attributable to other unspecified acts or omissions. The res ipsa loquitur rule aids the injured party who does not know and therefore cannot plead or adduce proof showing the specific cause of or how the event which resulted in his injury occurred, but if he knows how it came to happen, and just what caused it, and either specifically pleads or proves the cause, there is neither room nor necessity for the presumption or inference which the rule affords.
Id. However, “if the plaintiff’s evidence tends to show the cause of the occurrence but if that evidencе also leaves the cause in doubt or not clearly shown, plaintiff will not be deprived of the benefit of the res ipsa loqui-tur doctrine.” Id.
On appeal, the evidence presented is not reweighed.
Stride,
The Rupps concede that the Weaks’ injury is of the kind that does not ordinarily occur without someone’s negligence. Whether the evidence would support a finding that the furnace was under the Rupps’ control and whether the Rupps had superior knowledge of the cause of the incident is, therefore, determined. The “control” element of res ipsa loquitur has been explained as follows:
If the plaintiff shows the defendant was in exclusive control of the instrumentality which caused the accident, he has inferentially focused nеgligence upon defendant. If the plaintiff does not show the defendant’s exclusive control of the instrumentality, he still may fix the defendant with responsibility for the negligence by showing the defendant had the right or power to control the instrumentality and the opportunity to exercise it.
Mahan v. Missouri Pacific R. Co.,
In Niman, tenants of a fifth floor apartment in an elеven story building were injured when the pipes to the radiator heating system in their apartment ruptured causing hot water and slime to enter their apartment. Id. The court found the landlords were liable under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. Id. at 211. The court reasoned that the defendants retained control over the heating system because the defendants were to provide heat to the apartment; the defendants owned and maintained all portions of the heating mechanism; and the plaintiff had no interest in the heating system other than to report defective conditions to the landlord. Id. at 210-11. The court concluded that because “the defendants had sole and exclusive control of the entire heating system and particularly that portion which ruptured and caused the damage suffered” the plaintiffs case was properly submitted under the res ipsa loqui-tur theory. Id. at 211.
Here, too, the evidence conclusively establishes that the Rupps maintained control of the heating system. As in Niman, the Rupps owned the heating system in the apartment building, including the furnace located in the Weaks’ apartment. As in Ni-man, the Rupps had sole responsibility for the repair and maintenance of the heating system. As in Niman, the Weaks’ only interest in the heating system was to provide notice to the Rupps when it was not properly functioning. Because the Rupps maintained the exclusive control over the furnace in the Rupps apartment the Weaks have established the second element for application of res ipsa loquitur just as the tenants in Ni-man made a submissible case under res ipsa loquitur.
Whether the evidence supports a finding of “superior knowledge” as to the cause of the carbon monoxide emission is next determined. Missouri courts often infer the “superior knowledge” element of res ipsa loqui-tur from the defendant s control over the instrumentality at issue.
See Niman,
The uncontradicted evidence showed that the furnace within the Weaks’ apartment emitted carbon monoxide fumes. The Rupps have superior knowledge as to the cause of the emission of the carbon monoxide filmes from the Weaks’ furnace. As in
Niman,
the Rupps’ superior knowledge is primarily inferred from their exclusive control over the heating system. The Rupps, as landlords, exercised sole responsibility for the repair
Having made a submissible ease under res ipsa loquitur, the Weaks were entitled to consideration by the trier of fact of the Rupps’ liability. The Weaks’ establishment of a submissible case under res ipsa loquitur resulted in a permissible, rebuttable inference of negligence by the Rupps.
Hale v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
The trial court entered judgment in favor of the Rupps on the Weaks claim of res ipsa loquitur. The trial court, hоwever, did not make any findings of fact or conclusions of law regarding its determination that the Rupps were not liable under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. On review, whether the trial court decided that res ipsa loquitur was inapplicable or whether it applied the doctrine and chose to reject the inference of negligence established by the Weaks cannot be determined from the record. Because the Weaks made a submissible case under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, and upon review of the record, whether thе trial court applied the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is undeter-minable, remand is required. The case is remanded to the trial court for a new trial to determine whether the Rupps are liable under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. Point two is granted.
The decision of the trial court finding that the Rupps are not liable under a theory of specific negligence is affirmed. That portion of the judgment finding for defendants on plaintiff’s theory of res ipsa loquitur is reversed, and the case is remanded for the trier of fact to determine the Rupps’ liability under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.
All concur.
