Cabell v. Standard Oil Co.

159 S.E. 49, 110 W. Va. 609, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 133
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1931
Docket6962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 159 S.E. 49 (Cabell v. Standard Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cabell v. Standard Oil Co., 159 S.E. 49, 110 W. Va. 609, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 133 (W. Va. 1931).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

The defendant complains of verdict and judgment against it for $10,000, in the circuit court of Nicholas County, in *610 favor of the plaintiff for personal injuries suffered by him in an explosion of an alleged mixture of kerosene and gasoline.

Plaintiff was injured early in the morning of January 30, 1929. He says that after he had dressed he went to the kitchen and stirred down the ashes in the stove (bituminous coal was used for fuel), saw no indication of burning coals, placed some kindling wood and fresh coal on the burned coal, and then picked up the oil can (one-gallon in size) from the floor of the kitchen where it had remained through the night and started to pour oil from the can onto the kindling and coal (the spout of the can being about eighteen inches from the kindling), and that just'as he started to pour the liquid the explosion occurred. The bottom was blown out of the can and fire ensued. Serious results attended.

The liquid in the can had been purchased as and for kerosene by the plaintiff three days prior to the accident from John Dickinson, a retail merchant in the neighborhood. Some of the liquid, but just how much is not definitely shown, had been taken out of the can for use in filling lamps prior to the morning of the accident. Dickinson had purchased what was supposed to be 77 gallons of kerosene from a tank wagon of the defendant the 14th of January, 1929, which liquid was on said date placed by Hampton and Miller, agents for' the defendant, into a large container in Dickinson’s wareroom adjoining his store. The one gallon of oil which plaintiff purchased of Dickinson on the 27th came out of said container and was a part of the said 77-gallon delivery. It is the plaintiff’s theory that through negligence or mistake of some sort the liquid which was placed by Hampton and Miller into the Dickinson tank was not commercial kerosene but was in fact a mixture of gasoline and kerosene in the proportion of fifteen per centum gasoline and eighty-five per centum kerosene.

A detailed discussion of the voluminous evidence will not be attempted. Though the record evidence of the defendant is full and complete, showing the exact gallonage of both gasoline and kerosene in the separate compartments of the defendant’s truck operated by Hampton and Miller on the 14th of January, 1929, and accounting for the sale and delivery of every gallon thereof on that day by them, the records *611 do not eliminate tbe human element. The truck contained four large compartments, two for kerosene, two for gasoline. A pipe leading from-each of the compartments terminated at the rear of the truck with a spigot attached. The spigots bore labels as to the contents of-the compartments respectively. When Hampton and Miller made the delivery on the 14th of January to Dickinson the tank truck was standing near the warehouse door. ■ Miller drew the oil from the spigot into five-gallon cans and as each can was filled he handed it to Hampton who stood in the door of the wareroom and carried the oil to the tank and poured it into the same.- The spigots closed automatically when not held open by the operator. These two- men say they made no mistake in making that delivery. The jury says they did. The jury made such finding specifically in response to a special interrogatory submitted to it by the court. Under principles of law too well settled to require citation of authority, this Court cannot, on that pointed issue of fact, invade the province of the 'jury and say that its finding in that particular is wrong. Such would be our duty if the finding were against a plain preponderance of the evidence or inconsistent with physical facts. Such is not the situation. It is not denied by the defense that two other mistakes in the delivery of kerosene and gasoline were made by truck men of the defendant in the same general community. One of these other mistakes was made just five days subsequent to the delivery of the 77 gallons of liquid to Dickinson, and the operator who made the mistake was the same man Miller who assisted in making the delivery to Dickinson. True, in both of these two other instances the mistake-was discovered by the delivery man at the time that it was made and proper steps were immediately taken to avoid any difficulty by reason thereof.

In this, connection it is said on behalf of defendant, if Hampton and Miller in fact made a mistake when making the delivery to Dickinson,- that, in order for a mixture to have been created on the basis of fifteen per centum gasoline and eighty-five per centum kerosene, as claimed by plaintiff, it would have been necessary for them to include in their delivery to Dickinson 16y2 gallons of gasoline. And, not only so, *612 but that if they made that mistake there was left in their custody an extra amount of kerosene in the same gallonage, 36% gallons, which it was necessary for them to dispose of under the guise of gasoline in order to make their records clear for that day. The defense urges that it is highly improbable that a counter-balancing mistake of that sort could have been made, and that there is no basis on which to assume that the truck men after making delivery to Dickinson purposefully delivered 16% gallons of kerosene instead of gasoline to some one else in order to cover up their mistake. Plaintiff did not carry the burden of establishing by proof what may have happened with reference to other deliveries, nor was it incumbent on the jury to explain what may have happened with respect to the excess amount of kerosene left in the hands of the truck men, occasioned by the mistake in the delivery to; Dickinson, if they believed from the evidence that such mistake was made in the Dickinson delivery. The matters thus presented by the defendant were, of course, proper for defense, but they were not conclusive and were not binding on the jury.

Proceeding now from the basis of the jury’s specific finding that Hampton and Miller mixed gasoline with kerosene when making delivery to Dickinson, the serious problem remaining for consideration is as to whether the plaintiff contributed to his own injury by the manner in which he undertook to use the contents of the can in starting a fire in his kitchen stove. There is the testimony of one witness that on the morning of the accident the plaintiff told him that he had carried a shovelful of burning coals from the grate in an adjoining room and had placed them in the kitchen stove before attempting to use the oil. Plaintiff denied that he made such statement or that he did such thing, and several other persons who were present at his home immediately following the accident, at the time that he is supposed to have made this statement, testify that they did not hear it. This special interrogatory was submitted to the jury: “Did the plaintiff, W. B. Cabell, place coals of fire, kindling wood and coal in the fire box on the cooking stove on the morning of the explosion and after so doing pour a part of the content of the oil can *613 thereon?” To which interrogatory the jury replied: “No hot coals, but coal, kindling, and contents of the oil can.”

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.E. 49, 110 W. Va. 609, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabell-v-standard-oil-co-wva-1931.