If the receptacle is sparking, melted, or burned, shut the breaker off and call a licensed electrician!
Last month, I approached a breaker panel downstairs in the basement and my eye was immediately drawn to this burnt receptacle next to it. This can be caused by a number of things, but mostly just because the receptacle is old, and the metal receptors inside the slot can't grip the plug tightly. When the metal receptors grip the plug tightly, a firm electrical connection is made with no sparks. If the connection is loose, then the electricity actually wants to jump across the gap, and that's when sparks fly (and not in a good way). I tested the top receptacle to make sure it was at least wired correctly, but it didn't work. I looked inside the breaker panel and the breaker for that receptacle was tripped. Since inspectors don't operate secondary controls, I left it be and called for it's replacement with a new GFCI-protected receptacle.


