Current:Home > ScamsNorth Carolina court rules landlord had no repair duty before explosion -Nova Finance Academy
North Carolina court rules landlord had no repair duty before explosion
View
Date:2025-04-18 11:09:11
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A tenant severely burned by a natural gas explosion inside his North Carolina rental home can’t successfully sue the landlord for negligence or other claims because there is no evidence the owner was made aware about needed house repairs and a possible gas leak inside, the state Supreme Court ruled on Friday.
By a 5-2 decision, justices reversed a split 2022 Court of Appeals panel that had declared claims filed by Anthony Terry could be tried alleging William V. Lucas failed in his duty to make home repairs and use reasonable care to inspect and maintain the property.
An explosion occurred in April 2017 when Terry turned on the light in the bathroom of his three-bedroom Durham home, setting him on fire. He was in a coma for four months and wasn’t released from medical care until the end of 2018, and years later still suffered constant pain and was bedbound most of the time, the prevailing Court of Appeals opinion said.
There was a water leak in the bathroom that an expert said had started seven years earlier, causing a hole in the floor and a corroded and rusted pipe in the crawlspace that supplied natural gas to the furnace. In the months before the explosion, the natural gas company and fire department came to the home twice to respond to reports of the smell of gas, Friday’s ruling said.
In the majority opinion that sided with then-Durham County Superior Court Judge Orlando Hudson’s ruling to dismiss Terry’s lawsuit, Associate Justice Tamara Barringer said that the common law creates no duty for a landlord to inspect a leased property — something that Lucas hadn’t done since Terry and his family occupied the property. Terry’s wife signed a lease for the home in the mid-2000s.
And the state’s Residential Rental Agreements Act, enacted in 1977, creates a landlord’s duty to make repairs, but only after receiving notice of the problem or acquiring actual knowledge about the repair, Barringer wrote. Terry never provided notice to Lucas about the hole or the water leak or told Lucas about the times firefighters or the gas company had come to investigate gas leak reports, she added.
Terry’s attorneys also argued that Lucas had a duty to comply with local housing codes, but the lack of notice about issues afforded “him no opportunity to take reasonable steps to remedy a violation,” Barringer wrote.
Associate Justice Allison Riggs, who wrote a dissenting opinion, said she would have allowed the case to go before a jury, saying the 1977 law does create a duty for a landlord in part to maintain a property’s facilities and appliances “in good and safe working order.”
The case record “demonstrates genuine issues about whether this landlord was negligent in the duty to maintain in ‘good and safe’ working order the gas-fired furnace and associated gas piping,” Riggs wrote. Associate Justice Anita Earls joined in Riggs’ opinion.
Natural gas provider Public Service Co. of North Carolina was a lawsuit defendant but claims against it were dismissed. The case attracted legal briefs from lawyers for several advocacy groups for the poor and for the North Carolina Association of Defense Attorneys.
veryGood! (63742)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Chrishell Stause Has a Fierce Response to Critics of The Last of Us' Queer Storylines
- Here's Why Red Lipstick Makes You Think of Sex
- Royal Caribbean cruise ship passenger goes overboard on trip to Hawaii
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- U.S. tracking high-altitude balloon first spotted off Hawaii coast
- How the false Russian biolab story came to circulate among the U.S. far right
- Hal Walker: The Man Who Shot The Moon
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Cryptocurrency Is An Energy Drain
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Transcript: Rep. Tony Gonzales on Face the Nation, April 30, 2023
- SpaceX brings 4 astronauts home with midnight splashdown
- Taylor Swift's Handmade Eras Tour Backstage Pass Is Something Out of a Lavender Haze
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- The Other Two Gets a Premiere Date for Season 3
- Wife of police officer charged with cyanide murder in Thailand as list of victims grows to 13
- Sudan ceasefire holds, barely, but there's border chaos as thousands try to flee fighting between generals
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
A delivery robot creates a poetic moment in the woods of England
Facebook shrugs off fears it's losing users
Trump arrives in Scotland to open golf course
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
Vanderpump Rules' Katie Maloney Warned Co-Stars Hide Your Boyfriend From Raquel Leviss
Kenya starvation cult death toll hits 90 as morgues fill up: Nothing prepares you for shallow mass graves of children
Axon halts its plans for a Taser drone as 9 on ethics board resign over the project