Belcher v. Lentz Hardware Co.

125 P.2d 648, 13 Wash. 2d 523
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1942
DocketNo. 28625.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 P.2d 648 (Belcher v. Lentz Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belcher v. Lentz Hardware Co., 125 P.2d 648, 13 Wash. 2d 523 (Wash. 1942).

Opinion

Millard, J.

Plaintiff was seriously burned March, 1940, while using on his own premises a “Super-flame” gasoline operated weed burner purchased by a school district in Yakima county September, 1939, from defendant corporation, a retail hardware dealer. On the *524 theory that the proximate cause of his injury was the defective construction of the weed burner, of which defective condition defendant had knowledge or notice, and that plaintiff relied upon defendant’s misrepresentation that the weed burner was safe, sound to use, and well suited for the purpose for which it was sold, plaintiff instituted this action to recover against defendant for personal injury he sustained. The cause was tried to the court sitting with a jury. Defendant’s challenge, at the close of plaintiff’s case, to the sufficiency of the evidence and defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, at the close of plaintiff’s case, were denied. Defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the disagreement of the jury was granted. Plaintiff’s motion for new trial was overruled. Plaintiff appealed.

Counsel for appellant contend that an instrumentality, such as a weed burner which uses gasoline under pressure for fuel, is in itself imminently and inherently dangerous unless properly constructed; that the weed burner was purchased upon specific representations and warranties of respondent (who had knowledge or notice that the weed burner was improperly, defectively, and dangerously constructed) that the weed burner was a safe instrument to be used for the purpose for which it was intended; and that, by reason of defective construction of the weed burner, appellant sustained injuries to recover for which this action was instituted.

A negative answer to the question whether there is evidence or reasonable inference from evidence to sustain a verdict that defective construction of the weed burner was a proximate cause of the accident, is determinative of this appeal. The facts, briefly, are as follows:

*525 Appellant, principal of a public school in Yakima county, accompanied by a janitor of the same school, called at respondent’s store in the fall of 1939 and purchased for the school district employing him a “Super-flame” weed burner. Respondent had been selling the burners, which it purchased from the manufacturer thereof in Colorado, about three years. One of respondent’s clerks explained to appellant, who stated he was without experience in the use of such instrument, how to operate the burner and informed appellant that the weed burner was a safe and easy machine or instrument to operate, and fit in every way for the purpose for which it was being sold.

Appellant and the janitor took one of the weed burners with them to the school where they were employed, but returned it to respondent’s store a few days later, with the explanation that they had difficulty in fastening the top. A clerk employed by respondent instructed appellant and the janitor how to fasten the top. Those two gentlemen, who were satisfied by that instruction, again took the weed burner with them to their school and used it in burning weeds in the school yard. As the weeds were too wet, these gentlemen stored the burner, which still contained gasoline in its tank, in the furnace room at the school house, where it remained during the winter. It was later used by the janitor and two or three boys in burning weeds at the janitor’s home.

March 3, 1940, six months subsequent to its purchase by the school district, the burner was taken from the school house by appellant, who purchased some gasoline to operate the burner, and used about an hour by appellant and his brother in burning weeds on appellant’s land. While appellant’s brother was using the burner, the jet became clogged. Appellant took the jet *526 apart and cleaned it. He then relighted the burner. About this time, a neighbor halted at appellant’s land, whereupon the three — appellant, his brother, and the neighbor — squatted on the ground and chatted for a few minutes. During this period of neighborly conversation, the tank (which contained gasoline) of the weed burner was resting on the ground, and appellant was holding the hose and pipe attachment in front of him with the flame several inches above the ground. Appellant noticed that the hose had slipped about one-half inch along the nipple and that gasoline bubbles were forming. Almost coincident in time with his request to his brother to get a pair of pliers, the hose came off the nipple, appellant was sprayed with gasoline escaping through the hose, and the gasoline ignited with resultant serious burning of appellant.

Appellant testified that he operated the weed burner, as instructed by respondent, by pumping air into the gasoline tank (on which there was no gauge or anything else to indicate the amount of pressure in the tank) to create pressure which forced the gas through the pipe and hose on the burner. After appellant had produced what he deemed was sufficient pressure on the gas, he warmed the burner and then opened a stop valve to permit the gasoline to flow from the chamber into the burner. The hose connecting the burner with the gas tank came off the pipe, causing the gasoline to spray appellant, and the flame from the burner came into contact with appellant and ignited the gasoline.

The only conversation, other than respondent’s representation that the weed burner was safe and well suited for the purpose for which the school district purchased it, had by appellant and respondent’s clerks was with reference to the top of the weed burner and not to any other part of the machine. Appellant did *527 not at any time examine the connection where the hose was put over the nipple, nor the crimp clamp which had been installed at the factory. The first time appellant noticed the hose was loose was immediately prior to the time it came off the nipple and he was sprayed with gasoline. Appellant and the janitor testified that, after they were shown by one of the respondent’s clerks how to fasten the cap on the top of the tank, they had no further trouble as to that.

It is appellant’s position that the burner was defectively constructed in that it had no gauge or anything on the tank to indicate the air pressure; that the weed burner lacked a clamp or other device to hold the hose on the pipe; and that the pressure from the tank through the feed to the burner caused the hose to become detached from the pipe and permitted the gasoline to be sprayed with considerable force upon appellant.

Appellant, according to his own testimony, did not pump air into the tank to the extent that he felt there was excess pressure during any of the time appellant was using the weed burner. There is no evidence that the absence of a pressure gauge was in any way a contributing cause of the accident, and there is no testimony, except that of appellant’s expert witnesses, as to the cause of the separation of the hose from the nipple, which testimony is not to the effect that the burner was defectively constructed and that such defective construction was a proximate cause of the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 P.2d 648, 13 Wash. 2d 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belcher-v-lentz-hardware-co-wash-1942.