C. F. Church Division of American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. v. Golden

1967 OK 130, 429 P.2d 771
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 29, 1967
Docket41213
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1967 OK 130 (C. F. Church Division of American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. v. Golden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. F. Church Division of American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. v. Golden, 1967 OK 130, 429 P.2d 771 (Okla. 1967).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice.

This litigation arises out of injuries sustained by Randy Darryl Perkins, age 18 months, when a fire occurred in the bathroom at the Perkins resident in the City of Norman, Cleveland County, Oklahoma, on November 14, 1961. The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court. Randy Darryl Perkins will sometimes be referred to as “Randy” and the defendant will sometimes be referred to as “Church.”

The defendant is engaged in the manufacture, sale and distribution of toilet seats throughout the United States and the State of Oklahoma. Plaintiff contends that the defendant was negligent in manufacture of a toilet seat installed in the bathroom of the Perkins home in the City of Norman, in that the seat was covered with plastic material containing a highly inflammable prod- *773 net known as "cellulose nitrate” or “nitro cellulose,” causing a fire in the bathroom of the Perkins home and resulting in extremely serious injuries to the minor plaintiff.

The defendant in its answer denied negligence, contends that all conditions with reference to the use of the toilet seat were open and obvious and that the incident was an unavoidable accident.

Upon the issues made by the pleadings the case was tried to a jury in the Superior Court of Creek County, Oklahoma.

Randy Perkins was alone in the bathroom. He was too young to use the toilet seat and had toddled into the bathroom. His mother did not know he was in the bathroom until she heard him cry. A lighted wall radiant gas heater located about eighteen inches from the toilet was lighted at the time the fire occurred. The toilet seat was submitted in evidence and appeared to be burned and scarred.

Plaintiff submitted no direct evidence as to the cause of the fire. The mother testified that she did not know “how this toilet seat got on fire.”

The toilet seat had been installed in the house at the time it was built in April, 1950, and had been in continuous use for more than eleven years at the time the fire occurred. The mother testified it was “just an ordinary toilet seat.”

The vital issue of fact presented to the jury involved the flammability of the product known as cellulose nitrate. Plaintiff submitted the testimony of several experts establishing the product to be highly inflammable. Defendant submitted the testimony of experts establishing the product to be only slightly inflammable. This issue was submitted to the jury under proper instructions not excepted to by either of the parties with the exception of the instruction on unavoidable casualty. The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant.

Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial but does not argue in this court that the motion for new trial should have been granted on any grounds other than those specified by the trial court in sustaining the motion for new trial. ■

The trial court sustained the motion of the plaintiff for a new trial and this appeal is prosecuted from his decision.

In sustaining the motion of the plaintiff' the trial judge stated his reasons as follows; ■

“1. The court could not conscientiously approve the verdict.
“2. Erroneous admission of exhibits, same being pieces of toilet seats that experiments had been performed upon by' the defendants, and no evidence was presented of the seat’s chemical contents or the conditions under which the experiment had been made.
“3. Error of the court in instructing on unavoidable accident.
“4. That the verdict was against the' evidence and substantial injustices was done the plaintiff.”

In his brief counsel for the plaintiff concedes that the trial court would not have been justified in granting a new trial for the reasons stated in 1 and 4. There is no merit to those two propositions. We have held in' several cases that it is error for the trial' court to grant a new trial upon the ground that he cannot conscientiously agree with the verdict of the jury and substitute hia opinion for that of the jury. Cosmo Construction Company v. Loden, Okl., 352 P.2d 910; Neely v. Morris, Okl., 333 P.2d 301.

This leaves for our conclusion solely the correctness of the decision of the trial court in granting a new trial for the reasons stated in 2 and 4. These are the sole contentions presented in the briefs of the parties.

Reason 2 is as follows:

“2. Erroneous admission of exhibits, same being pieces of toilet seats that experiments had been performed upon by the defendants, and no evidence was presented of the seat’s chemical contents or the conditions under which the experiment had been made.”

The vital question for determination by the jury in this case was the flammability *774 or lack of flammability of a plastic known as cellulose nitrate. It was conceded by the defendant that the covering on the toilet seat involved contained this component. An officer for the defendant company testified that the defendant had used the compound in the manufacture of all toilet seats sold and distributed by it since 1919 and since 1940 had manufactured, sold and distributed more than four and one-half million toilet seats wherein cellulose nitrate had been used in processing the covering for the seats.

A number of chemists and other expert witnesses testified for each of the parties. These expert witnesses related the results of experiments made wherein they subjected cellulose nitrate to intense heat. In making these experiments the experts testifying for the plaintiff in some instances used small strips of material scraped from the toilet seat burned in the accident. In other instances raw cellulose nitrate in sheet form was used. One of the plaintiff’s expert witnesses testified regarding experiments made on a toilet seat manufactured by the defendant after the accident occurred. The witness purchased the seat at a supply store in Tulsa, Oklahoma, comparable in chemical analysis to the seat in question; that he took an electric radiant heater and placed it 18 inches from the edge of the heater to the toilet seat; that within less than an hour, the seat had flashed and fired. Most of the experts testifying for the plaintiff testified that cellulose nitrate is highly inflammable.

The evidence objected to by the plaintiff was offered in connection with the testimony of two expert witnesses testifying for the defendant. One Dr. Otto Smith, the former head of the Department of Chemical Engineering and Geology, Oklahoma State University, the second, Allen Midyett, Jr., Director of Products Development and Engineering for defendant. Midyett testified that cellulose nitrate is used in processing the covering on all toilet seats manufactured and sold by the defendant.

Both of these experts testified concerning the results of a number of experiments made on certain toilet seats manufactured by the defendant in the normal production method with the use of cellulose nitrate in processing the covering. The toilet seats were cut up in blocks and portions of the covering removed from the seats.

Without objection on the part of plaintiff’s counsel Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
1967 OK 130, 429 P.2d 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-f-church-division-of-american-radiator-standard-sanitary-corp-v-okla-1967.