Chapman v. Pfarr

123 N.W. 992, 145 Iowa 196
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 123 N.W. 992 (Chapman v. Pfarr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. Pfarr, 123 N.W. 992, 145 Iowa 196 (iowa 1909).

Opinion

McClain, J.

The evidence, so far as it is necessary to consider it on this appeal, tended to show the following state of facts: Defendants were conducting at the town of Pisgah a department store under the management of one Strong, in which coal oil was kept for sale at retail. Three or four weeks prior to the accident Strong received at the store a barrel of coal oil bearing the stamp of the state oil inspector, showing a flash test of the contents at one hundred and six degrees, and this was the only barrel of oil from which sales were' made to customers from the time of its receipt until after the accident. Strong used oil from this barrel for filling lamps in the store, and for sprinkling the floor, without discovering that it was not' of the purity and standard indicated by the inspector’s stamp. It was sold to and used by various customers without complaint, save that -about a week or ten days after the receipt of the barrel Strong’s daughter, who was employed in the store, received from one Booth a telephone message to the effect that his landlady told him that in lighting a fire from the oil there was a flash, as though it might contain gasoline or something of that kind, and that a test ought to be made of it. This communication was transmitted to Strong by his daughter, and in her presence he [199]*199put some of tlie oil from the barrel into a saucer and took it into the alley at the rear of the storej where he tested it by lighting matches and holding them at the surface of the oil, without securing any flame or flash. Thereupon the daughter telephoned -to Booth that the oil had been tested and was all right. About two weeks after this test the wife of plaintiff purchased a gallon of oil, which she took home with her in a can, and with plaintiff’s assistance used it for lighting a fire in a cook stove, in which-there had been no fire since the preceding day. The oil was poured upon cobs in the stove, and the open -can was placed on tlie floor near by. When a match was applied to the cobs, there was an explosion, resulting in slight in-, jury to plaintiff and severe injuries to his wife and three of his children, from which the wife and children died within a short time. On information sent to the chief oil inspector at Des Moines immediately after the accident, a deputy, one Cousins, was sent to inspect the oil in the barrel from which the sale had been made to plaintiff’s wife, and this inspector discovered by putting some of the oil into a cup and holding a lighted match above the oil and below the top of the cup, that there was a flash. ■ This the deputy inspector testified was the usual way of making a test where there was no special apparatus at hand. A subsequent thorough test of the oil showed it contained twenty-one percent of gasoline.

I. An instruction in -the following language was given to the jury:

The specific allegation of negligence made in the petition is that A. L. Strong, agent of the defendants, failed to have the oil in question-inspected or examined by an oil inspector. On this point you are instructed that as Strong was the agent of the defendants, carrying on their store, his negligence, if any, would in law be the negligence of' the defendants. It was his duty to use reasonable and ordinary care not to sell oil which did not conform to the test required by law. In the first instance; and until he [200]*200had knowledge to the contrary, or, such notice as would put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry which would lead, to such knowledge, he had the right to rely upon the inspector’s stamp or brand upon the barrel from which the-oil was taken. If, however, such information came to him prior to the accident as would put an ordinarily prudent person upon inquiry and investigation that would have developed, through inspection by the state oil inspector, the fact that the oil 'in question was not up to the required test, then he was negligent in not making such investigation, or having it made before making further sales of the oil. In this connection it becomes important to determine 'whether the test which Strong made and the results which he obtained therefrom were such as to justify an ordinarily prudent man in believing that the oil in question was up to the required standard. The statute, you will observe, required a closed test. In determining this question you should take into consideration, not only the manner in which he made the test, but also the testimony of experts as to what such a test would disclose, so far as it bears thereon, and all the facts and circumstances known to Strong at the time, and therefrom, together with all the evidence bearing thereon, determine whether the. said Strong was negligent in not having the oil inspected by a state oil inspector, and if you find he acted as a man of ordinary prudence would under like circumstances, then he was not negligent, and plaintiff can not recover herein.

Italics are used in the instruction as here printed for the purpose of pointing out the special clauses of which appellant complains.

I. illuminating deaier t^tesu statutes. It is apparent from this instruction that the jury might properly .believe therefrom that, although Strong, after complaint had been made by Booth as to the character of the oil, made such a-test thereof as uisuially made by competent persons in demining whether it was dangerous for use, and reasonably believed that it was not dangerous and corresponded to the standard indicated by the inspector’s stamp, he was nevertheless negligent in continu[201]*201ing to sell it if, on an inspection by the oil inspector in the method prescribed by statute it would have been found not. to be of the standard required by the statute. The allegation of negligence was that. Strong, as defendants’ agent, failed to have the oil in question inspected or examined by the oil inspector, and the evidence tended to show that on such inspection it would have been discovered by the oil inspector, using the tests which by statute he is required to use, that it was dangerous. The jury was told that it was “important to determine whether the test which Strong made and the results which he obtained therefrom were such as to justify an ordinarily prudent man in believing that- the oil in question was up to the required standard,” and this, no doubt, was correct, but the jury was also told that the statute required a closed test, and in determining the question of Strong’s negligence they “should take into consideration, not only the manner in which he made the test, but also the testimony of experts as to what such a test would disclose so far as it bears thereon.” Unless Strong was negligent in not securing a test by the oil inspector according to the statutory method, after he was advised that something seemed to be wrong with the oil, or in not himself making a closed test such as experts would make, this instruction was wrong and misleading; for Strong had the right to rely on the inspector’s brand, indicating that- the oil in the barrel was of the standard required by statute, until he had information such as would indicate to a reasonably prudent man dealing in oil that it did not correspond to the standard indicated by such brand, and the real question for determination is as to the duty of Strong after receiving such information.

The statute with reference to the inspection and sale of petroleum products for illuminating purposes (Acts 30th General Assembly, chapter 87; Code Supp.

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Related

Miller v. Griffith
66 N.W.2d 505 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1954)
Welton v. Iowa State Highway Commission
233 N.W. 876 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
McLawson v. Paragon Repining Co.
164 N.W. 668 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1917)
Pfarr v. Standard Oil Co.
176 Iowa 577 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1916)
Chapman v. Pfaar
132 N.W. 957 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
123 N.W. 992, 145 Iowa 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-pfarr-iowa-1909.