Bonham v. Winchester Repeating Arms Co.

179 Ill. App. 469, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 934
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 10, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 179 Ill. App. 469 (Bonham v. Winchester Repeating Arms Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonham v. Winchester Repeating Arms Co., 179 Ill. App. 469, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 934 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

On August 17, 1910, William T. Bonham, defendant in error, lost his left thumb, through the bursting of a shot gun he was firing. He afterwards brought suit against Winchester Repeating Arms Company, plaintiff in error, who had made and placed upon the market the shell he was using, claiming that the bursting of the gun barrel and consequent injury to him was caused by the defective and dangerous construction of the shell used and discharged by him at the time. There were three counts in the declaration. The first alleged, that said company was engaged in the manufacture and sale of loaded shot gun shells, charged with smokeless powder and leaden shot; that it warranted the same not to contain a sufficient quantity of powder or other explosive material, to render them dangerous or unsafe, while fired from a shot gun; that Bonham, relying on the warranty, purchased a box of said shells; that they contained large quantities of nitro glycerine and other high explosives; that they were so defective in their construction as to make them dangerous and unsafe to be used by Bonham in his shot gun; that while he, in the exercise of due care and caution, attempted to fire and discharge one of said shells from his shot gun, said shell, by reason of its defective construction and the large quantity of nitro glycerine and other high explosives contained therein, exploded with great force, tore a hole in the barrel of his shot gun and injured him. The second charged, that said shell contained such large quantities of smokeless powder, and the proportions of the component parts of said powder were so carelessly and improperly mixed, as to render said shell defective and dangerous to Bon-. ham in firing and discharging the same from his shot gun. The third, that said shell contained a quantity of smokeless powder, so carelessly, negligently and defectively made that the nitro glycerine and other high explosive, component parts therein contained, had sweated out of and exuded from its retaining material and thereby the rapidity and force of the explosion of said power had become so accelerated as to render said loaded shell dangerous to one using it, and wholly unfit to be fired in and discharged from any shot gun.

To this declaration the company filed a special plea in abatement to the jurisdiction of the court, stating it was a foreign corporation and that the person upon whom the service of summons had been made held no relation to the company that authorized him to accept or receive service of process. Issues were made up on this plea, a jury waived, and a trial had before the court. The finding was in favor of defendant in error and sustained the service of the summons and thereupon the company filed the general issue to\the declaration. A trial upon the merits was had before a jury which found a verdict in favor of defendant in error for $500, for which amount judgment was given against said company. Plaintiff in error has assigned 31 errors and argued the same under numerous heads, but after a careful consideration of the whole case, we have concluded that it is only necessary for us here to discuss the error assigned on the refusal of the court below to give a peremptory instruction to the jury to find the defendant not guilty at the close of the evidence in the case.

The proofs showed that defendant in error Bonham, a lawyer, living in Fairfield, Illinois, went in a buggy on the morning of the day in question, to his brother’s farm in a neighboring township, accompanied by a young man named Hilas Willis. He took with him an L. O. Smith, double barreled, hammerless shotgun, which he had owned about two years. He also had with him 18 or 20 “Leader” shells taken from a package of 25 he had purchased from a local dealer the previous November. The gun had been cleaned by Willis the evening before and at that time he, his father and several others, looked through the barrels and found there were no obstructions in them. After the gun was cleaned, Willis put it in a case. On the way out to the farm, the gun was not fired but coming back Mr. Bonham, put it together for the purpose of shooting doves and during the afternoon discharged the right hand barrel five or six times with no unusual result. When, however, they had returned to within a short distance of Fairfield, Mr. Bonham got out of the buggy for the purpose of shooting a dove and, walking towards it, fired the right-hand barrel of the gun, but missed. He then for the first time that day fired the left-hand barrel, when the same bursted, 4y2 to 5 inches from the breech end of the gun, making a hole in the barrel about two inches long with ragged edges, extending from the rib on the top of the barrel! around to the underside. It also caused a swelling downward on a part of the barrel, showing a distinct bulge of a ring-like form. The explosion tore off the thumb on the left hand of the defendant in error. The powder used in the shells was known as Du Pont smokeless powder and was not manufactured by plaintiff in error, but was purchased by it from the Du Pont Nemours Powder Company and used by plaintiff in error in manufacturing shells. The powder was what was termed a slow burning powder, as compared with high explosives. It appears to have consisted mostly of gun cotton and was purchased in large quantities by the Winchester Company, which caused each lot purchased to be thoroughly tested in its laboratory. The proofs showed the shells were made in' an automatic machine that stopped in case of any imperfect construction in the course of their manufacture; that cartridges were constantly taken at random from those being manufactured and fired to test whether the material and construction were proper, about 2,000 being fired each day for that purpose. Quite a number of experts in the manufacture and use of powder and fire arms, and skilled workmen, were introduced on the part of plaintiff in error, to show the skill and unremitting care used by it in the manufacture of cartridges and no evidence was introduced to show that any of the cartridges used by Mr. Bonham the day in question, were possessed of any defects of construction. It is claimed, however, by him that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies to this case and therefore that all that was necessary for him to show in proof, was that he purchased the shells manufactured by plaintiff in error, in a sealed box, that when firing one of them, there was an explosion which tore a hole in the gun and injured him.

In the case of Schaller v. Independent Brewing Ass’n, 225 Ill. 492, the death of appellee’s intestate had been caused by an explosion which occurred while he was engaged in varnishing the inside of a beer tank. In order to enable the workmen to see to spread the varnish, it was necessary to have a light in the interior of the tank and an electric lamp attached to an extension cord was used for that purpose. The globe of this lamp appears to have been broken, thereby igniting gases of an explosive and inflammable nature, which were given off from the materials used in varnishing the tank, resulting in the explosion which caused the injury. The declaration charged the association' with negligently failing to furnish and provide reasonably safe light in the tank, and that the explosion and consequent injury resulted therefrom. The position taken by the plaintiff in the trial court, was that the explosion itself was prima facie evidence of negligence of the defendant; that it was not necessary to show that the brewing association was negligent but that it devolved upon the association to show that it was not negligent.

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Related

Sierocinski v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.
25 F. Supp. 706 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
179 Ill. App. 469, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonham-v-winchester-repeating-arms-co-illappct-1913.