Carstens v. Western Pipe & Steel Co. of California

252 P. 939, 142 Wash. 259, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1067
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1927
DocketNo. 20059. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 252 P. 939 (Carstens v. Western Pipe & Steel Co. of California) 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
Carstens v. Western Pipe & Steel Co. of California, 252 P. 939, 142 Wash. 259, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1067 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Bridges, J.

The lease which the plaintiffs gave the defendant, covering certain waterfront property in Seattle, contained this provision:

“At the expiration of the term hereof the said lessee [the defendant] will quit and surrender the said leased premises in as good state and condition as when possession is taken, damage by the elements or fire excepted.”

While the defendant was in possession, there was a somewhat disastrous fire which either destroyed or damaged some of the buildings located on the leased land and some of the derricks, cranes and other like property which were on the wharf and went with the lease. This same fire also damaged certain adjoining buildings belonging to the plaintiffs, but which were not on the leased premises. The plaintiffs brought this suit against the defendant to recover their damage because of the fire and expressly based their cause of action on the alleged negligence of the defendant. The case was tried to a jury, and the court gave the following instruction, to which defendant excepted:

“You are instructed that the lease from the plaintiffs to the defendant provides ‘At the expiration of the term hereof the said lessee (the defendant) will quit and surrender the said leased premises in as good state and condition as when possession is taken, dam *261 ages by the elements or fire excepted.’ I instruct you that this provision of the lease only exempts the defendant from damage to the premises due to accidental fires, and if you find that the fire in the present instance was caused through the negligence of the defendant, its servants and agents, as alleged in the complaint, and the said leased premises were not surrendered to the plaintiff at the end of the term in as good a state of repair and condition as they were when possession was delivered to the defendant, then said provision of the lease would not exempt the defendant from liability.”

There was a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for nine thousand dollars. The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, on the ground that the testimony failed to show any acts of negligence on its part which caused the fire, and at the same time moved for a new trial, based on most of the statutory grounds. The trial court refused the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, but granted a new trial because, as stated in the order, of an erroneous instruction. It seems, to be conceded that the instruction which the court thought was erroneous was the one which we have quoted. The plaintiffs have appealed from the order granting a new trial, and the defendant in this court not only upholds that order, but also contends that its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been granted.

We will first dispose of the motion for judgment.

The respondent, defendant below, had a contract with the city of Seattle to manufacture and furnish to it a lot of large iron pipes for the construction of the Cedar river pipe line. It provided that the pipes should be specially treated with a preparation known as ‘ ‘ sarco ’ ’, which is an asphalt derivative. For this purpose the respondent installed on the leased premises a large iron kettle, commonly spoken of as the dip tank: *262 It was approximately forty feet long, six feet six inches in width, and about seven feet in depth. It was placed within a furnace made of concrete lined with fire brick. The top portion of the dip tank had flanges which rested on the top of the concrete furnace. The sarco preparation was put into the tank, and in order to use it for the purpose of coating the pipes it had to be brought to a heat of about three hundred seventy-five degrees. This preparation would burn at about five hundred seventy degrees, but would flash at about four hundred eighty degrees. Once brought to the proper heating point, it took the preparation several hours to, materially cool. The oil which was used for heating purpose's was kept in a tank some little distance from the furnace and was fed into the furnace by means of pipes. A way was provided near the bottom of the tank for turning the oil on and off. It was customary to keep up the fire and cook the sarco material during the night, in order to have it ready for use the next day. The defendant had one watchman on the premises at night, whose duty was to heat the sarco and look after the furnace and the other property. At about eleven o’clock on the night of the conflagration, the watchman started the fires under the kettle and kept them going until about five o’clock the following morning. At that time he thought the sarco was sufficiently heated, and testified that he turned off the heat, stayed around the kettle fifteen or twenty minutes and then went to the office on the premises, as he had been previously instructed to do, for the purpose of building a fire in the stove in order to warm the room. This office was some nine hundred feet from the furnace. Before he had gotten the fire started in the office stove, he observed that there was a fire around the tank. At first there was a great amount of smoke, and then flame. From the *263 office he could hear the sizzling of the sarco which was in the tank. He called the city fire department, but before the fire could be put out much damage had been done. The night was a blustering one and the wind was blowing quite strong. The tank and the furnace were surrounded and covered by a wooden building or shack, probably roofed with some kind of iron.

The appellants charged negligence in the following particulars: That the defendant permitted a plank covered with drippings of asphalt to be laid and remain across the tank or upper portion of the furnace; that the tank was maintained in an open condition and was not sufficiently guarded; that the equipment for extinguishing any fire that might start in the tank was insufficient; and, in a general way, defendant was charged with negligently constructing and operating the tank and furnace.

"While the testimony is not very specific as to just how the fire started or what caused it, we are convinced from a careful reading of the evidence that there was sufficient to take the case to the jury on the question of the negligent construction and operation of the furnace and the tank. The testimony is clear that the fire started at the furnace. When the watchman turned off the oil and left the tank, the sarco was at a heat of about three hundred fifty degrees to three hundred seventy-five degrees. The fire brick were red hot; there was testimony to the effect that the flange of the kettle which rested on the upper part of the concrete portion of the furnace did not fit securely, and that drippings of the sarco would go between the kettle flange and the inner wall of the furnace, and thus onto the fire brick and down into the fire pit. Under these circumstances, it seems to us it was for the jury to determine whether the furnace was. properly constructed and operated, *264

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 939, 142 Wash. 259, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carstens-v-western-pipe-steel-co-of-california-wash-1927.