Bradley County Farm Bureau v. Epperson

73 S.W.2d 1116, 18 Tenn. App. 131, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 20, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 1116 (Bradley County Farm Bureau v. Epperson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley County Farm Bureau v. Epperson, 73 S.W.2d 1116, 18 Tenn. App. 131, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 18 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiff below, T. E. Epperson, has recovered verdict and judgment for $2,000 and costs, against the defendant below on account of the alleged burning of plaintiff’s barn; plaintiff’s contention being that said barn was negligently set fire to by sparks from the defendant’s feed grinding machine which was grinding feed for plaintiff in said barn. The defendant has appealed to this court, and has assigned errors, the first three of which make the question that there was no material evidence to support the verdict and judgment.

The plaintiff owned a farm in Bradley County upon which he had a frame barn 114 feet long and 30 feet wide, extending generally east and west. There was a hallway 12 feet wide extending through the barn from north to south. There was another hallway 10 feet wide extending through the barn from the east end to the first-mentioned hallway, but no further. The barn was on a hillside; the ground and floor at the east end being about 8 feet lower than the ground and floor at the west end. There was a loft in the barn extending from the 12-foot hallway to the east end. The floor of this loft was about 7 feet higher than the floor or ground at the east side of said 12-foot hallway. In the loft close to the 12-foot hallway the plaintiff had a quantity of corn stalk stored. In the loft and at the east end the plaintiff had a great many bales of straw stored. This straw extended close to the roof at the east end. In the east end of the loft and just under the roof there was a window or opening about 2)4 feet wide and 3 or 4 feet long.

*133 The defendant owned and operated a feed grinding machine which he would take to the barns of the various farmers in Bradley county and with which he would grind and sack their feed for compensation.

We think it here proper to describe the grinder. It was an ordinary automobile truck. Back of the cab and on the body of the truck there was an ordinary four-cylinder or four-cycle gasoline engine similar to any other four-cycle automobile or tractor engine, except that the exhaust pipe extended straight upward through the center of the hood about 12 inches. This engine supplied the motive power for the other machinery (also on the body of the truck) which did the grinding. As originally constructed and delivered to the defendant, this engine had a “muffler” on the exhaust pipe which made it impossible for sparks or flames to come out, even though the engine was not operating properly and was “missing” and “backfiring.” This “muffler” was especially designed, as was the engine itself, so that it would be safe to operate the grinder in barns and other places where there were inflammable materials.

Without the “muffler” there was great likelihood of sparks and flame coming out of the exhaust pipe; particularly if the engine was not running properly or was “missing” or “backfiring.” The principle is that when a four-cycle engine “misses,” that is the gasoline mixture in one of the cylinders fails to explode, it passes into the exhaust pipe and is there exploded by the exhaust heat and fire from the explosion of the mixture in the next cylinder. The result' is that unless there is a proper “muffler” on the exhaust the fire, flames and sparks pass out into the air.

The plaintiff’s evidence was to the following effect:

On December 1, 1931, plaintiff made an agreement over the telephone with one of defendant’s officials that defendant would send the grinder to plaintiff’s farm and grind his corn stalks and feed for the price of 20 cents per 100 pounds.

About 8 o’clock on the morning of December 2, 1931, two of defendant’s employees, Earl Haun and Phillip MeConnel, drove the grinder to plaintiff’s farm and to a point near his barn. Plaintiff was not at the barn at the time, but went there a few minutes later and showed Haun (who was in charge of the grinder, MeConnel being his assistant) where the corn stalks were which he desired to be ground. These stalks, as has been stated, were in the loft and close to the intersection of the two above-mentioned hallways.

Harm backed the grinder into the 12-foot hallway from the south and stopped it practically at the intersection of the two hallways. The back end of the grinder was probably 3 or 4 feet north of the north wall of the 10-foot hallway, if extended. Having reached this point, Haun shut off the engine which propelled the truck.

*134 Plaintiff and one of his hands went into the loft so that the hand could pass the stalks to plaintiff and so that plaintiff could pass them to Haun, who was standing on the ground and in a position to place the stalks into the grinding machine.

Haun started the engine which operated the grinding machinery. However, it did not run smoothly and was “missing” and “popping, ’ ’ indicating that it was ‘ ‘ backfiring, ’ ’ although the noise seems not to have been very loud. Haun shut the engine off and worked on it a few minutes. He then started it again, but it still did not run smoothly and continued to “miss” and make a “popping” sound. He ground one bunch of corn stalks, but when plaintiff handed him another bunch or was about to do so, he again shut the engine off. Altogether the engine was operated in the barn between five and ten minutes, and, as started, one bunch of stalks was ground.

As soon as Haun stopped the engine the last time, he started the truck engine and drove the grinder out of the barn. Within a minute and a half thereafter it was discovered that the straw in' the east end of the loft at or very near the above-described window or opening was on fire and blazing; the flames going out said window or opening. The point where the straw caught fire was 30 feet from the grinder engine and only a few feet higher than its exhaust pipe. There was no way of putting out the fire and the barn and part of its contents were completely destroyed.

While the grinder engine was being operated in the barn there was no “muffler” on the exhaust pipe, which was a straight open pipe extending upward about 12 inches above the hood of the engine and almost up to a level with the floor of the loft. There was considerable draft in the barn, and the breeze was somewhat from the north. The window or opening at or near the top of the east end of the loft had a tendency to draw any sparks which may have come out of the exhaust pipe towards it and the straw where the fire started.

Neither the plaintiff nor his hand who was in the loft with him had smoked in the barn that morning. Neither had plaintiff’s employee, Yarn ell, who was around and through the barn (but not in the loft) shortly before the fire. We pause here to state that Yarnell would not testify positively that he had not smoked his pipe in or near the barn that morning, but he did testify positively that if he had smoked his pipe he had held his thumb over its bowl so that no fire could get out of it.

Plaintiff, who was in better position to see them than any one else, did not see any sparks come out of the exhaust pipe, but it was light in the barn where the grinder was standing, and therefore practically impossible for him to have seen them; and he did not realize that there was danger of fire and was not looking for them.

The foregoing was the substance of the testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 1116, 18 Tenn. App. 131, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-county-farm-bureau-v-epperson-tennctapp-1934.