Castner Electrolytic Alkali Co. v. Davies

154 F. 938, 83 C.C.A. 510, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4604
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 1907
DocketNo. 280
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 154 F. 938 (Castner Electrolytic Alkali Co. v. Davies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castner Electrolytic Alkali Co. v. Davies, 154 F. 938, 83 C.C.A. 510, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4604 (2d Cir. 1907).

Opinion

EACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff was at work in what was known as the ’‘cell mounting room” in defendant's plant for the manufacture of caustic soda at Niagara Falls. This room was about 20x30 feet in size, situated on the first floor, with some windows opening outdoors anti others in the top for ventilation. Except for the “water heater” hereinafter mentioned, there was no means for heating this room. It communicated by a large door through a brick wall with an adjoining room, known’as the “cellroom,” which was always warm, being heated by steam night and day. In the cell mounting room there, was a hot-water heater variously estimated at from three to five feet in height, which was connected with a large tank, upon which there was a cover, located in the pump room 75 or 80 feet distant. The connection was by two pipes, a discharge and an intake. The heated water in the tank was used in the process of manufacture. Besides receiving the inflow of heated water from the heater, the water in the tank could also he warmed by a steam jet opening into it and leading from the main steam supply in another part of the building. Work was carried on night and day by three eight-hour shifts, but no one worked in the cell mounting room at night. At about 7 a. m. of Monday January 25, 1901-, one Thomas, the sweeper or janitor of that part of the building, reached the plant and went into the cell mounting room. He found the fire under the heater “dead out,” and the heater cold. It being a part of his duties to keep the fire going and to light it up when it went out, he cleaned out the fire box, and built up a new fire, which he lighted a little before 8 a. m. Some time between 9 and 10 a. m., the day shift being then at work in the room, a small quantity of steam and water was observed oozing through a crack about four or five inches long, running diagonally about two-thirds [940]*940the way down the heater. Thomas started to report the circumstance to a foreman, but within á few minutes the heater exploded, killing plaintiff’s intestate almost instantly. The complaint charged negligence in superintendence of the operation of the heater, and also in maintaining a heater not supplied with steam gauge or safety valve. The undisputed evidence showed that, so long as the connection was open with the large tank, no such appliances were needed, since the intake and discharge insured a constant circulation and the tank acted as an expansion chamber. Thereupon the charge of defective appliances was withdrawn.

The theory of the plaintiff was that the water in these pipes froze, thereby stopping the circulation, so that the imprisoned water, expanding and turning into steam under the influence of the relighted fire, exploded the heater. There was no direct proof of the presence of ice in the pipes, and the fundamental question is whether there was enough in the testimony to send the case to the jury — whether the presence of obstructing ice was a reasonable inference from facts which the jury might find to be proved or whether to reach such a conclusion was mere blind guesswork. Defendant’s counsel points out that the janitor testified that he did not think it was below freezing when he reached the-room at 7 a. m., and that no one else testifies to the temperature in the cell mounting room; that such room communicated with a lavatory and also with the cellroom, which was always heated, by a large opening which was always open; that these pipes never froze before, so far as any one knows; that water kept in certain cell bottoms in the cell mounting room had never been known to freeze; that the hot water in the tank, kept heated by the steam jet, would have a tendency to cause water to circulate through the pipes, even if the fire under the heater was extinguished; that it would go slowly, and that moving water does not freeze unless it is moving vary slowly; that pipes choke up otherwise than by freezing of the water within them;' that they become obstructed sometimes by accumulations of dirt or sediment from the water, or incrustations from the water on the inside of the pipes, sometimes from oil solidifying in time by the action of heat upon it, sometimes accumulations of red lead used in making joints would stop pipes up if they were small; that boilers sometimes explode from improper riveting or drilling of the holes that hold the rivets, or from poor or weak material.

On the other hand, it appeared that no one worked in that room at night, which accounts for nonproduction of direct evidence as to its ’temperature; that it was very cold from'8 p. m. till midnight and "(by. Weather Bureau Records) that from midnight till 7 a. m. the temperature outdoors was continuously one to two degrees below zero; that there was no heat supplied to the room except such as came from the heater itself or through the opening into the adjoining room, and that there were several windows opening into the room from without — six of them, defendant’s witness says — that, so far as appears, the fire had not theretofore been left unlighted during a night of zero weather; that the water in the cell bottoms was pure water from the Niagara river, while the water in the heater was water which had been once heated, one of defendant’s expert witnesses testifying that water which [941]*941has been heated will freeze a great deal more quickly than cold water which has not been subjected to heat; that the connecting pipes, over 70 feet in length, were not covered or protected; that they were from 2to 3 inches in diameter, and that defendant’s expert testified that he would not expect stoppage by rust scales or sediment in pipes of that size; that other witnesses testified that obstruction through accumulation of foreign matter would be likely to come about gradually and to give indications of its approach by such a reduction of water supply as would challenge attention; that the crack through which the steam and water was oozing is not shown to have been located at any line of rivets, and that there was nothing to indicate any latent defect in the material of which the heater was composed. There was no substantial conflict in the testimony as to the evidential facts, and the inferences drawn from them by the jury, as indicated by the verdict, seem to us reasonable and legitimate. Plaintiff was under no obligation to show the physical presence of ice in the pipes. No doubt it disappeared quickly after the catastrophe.

It is suggested that the proximate cause of the accident was the relighting of the fire, which was the act of Thomas, a fellow servant, for whose negligence defendant would not be responsible, and it was assigned as error that the court declined to submit the question of his negligence to the jury. The evidence, however, does not sustain a finding that Thomas was negligent in lighting the fire. It was his duty to do so generally when he found it out. On this occasion the heater was cold to the touch, but, for aught he knew, the fire might not have been extinguished more -than two or three hours. He had no means of knowing that it had been out all night with the water in pipes and heater exposed to a very low temperature. _ Pie might fairly assume that whoever had been in charge prior to his coming would have looked after it, or left word for him if there were any risk of its being frozen. The real negligence in the case is to be found in the conduct of the person in charge before Thomas arrived. The testimony showed that Ringleb, an extra foreman, was in charge of the shift from 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. of the day before. When he left at 4 p. m., the heater was operating with a fire in it. Pie returned at midnight to take the shift till 8 a. m., and found the fire out and the heater cold.

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Bluebook (online)
154 F. 938, 83 C.C.A. 510, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castner-electrolytic-alkali-co-v-davies-ca2-1907.