Cole v. Davis Automobile Company
This text of 73 A. 374 (Cole v. Davis Automobile Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This is an action of trespass on the case for negligence, brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him, in June or July, 1906, through the explosion of a gasoline tank caused by the ignition of the gasoline fumes therefrom by the ñames of a lighted gas forge near which the tank had been placed by Warren Ballou, superintendent or foreman of the defendant corporation, who had complete control of the repair shop, a separate department of the defendant’s business. The explosion, which bulged out the sides of and blew one end out of the tank, occurred immediately after the plaintiff had placed his left knee against the same, a cylinder about two- feet in length by about a foot in diameter, and which was lying across a bench which was from twenty-six to twenty-eight inches wide, for the purpose of scraping around *607 the rivets to make a clean surface for the application of solder in •the repairs which he had been ordered to make by Mr. Ballou, the foreman.
Upon trial in the Superior Court the plaintiff was nonsuited, upon the ground that the job was “an ordinary repair job, . . . and that the negligence, assuming there was negligence ’ of the foreman, the boss, was the negligence of a fellow-servant.”
To this ruling the plaintiff excepted, and the case is before this court upon the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions based thereon.
It appears that the plaintiff, a master plumber, was employed, by said Ballou, for the defendant corporation, about March, 1906, to repair automobile water coolers, and that during his said employment he repaired a water cooler and tank combined, water coolers, headlights, and copper tubes, but that he was not employed to, and had never been asked to, repair gasoline tanks, and he testified: “ If I had any idea that it was a gasoline tank I would not have stayed there even to converse with Mr. Ballou. I regard my life more than a gasoline tank.” He further testified that the tank which exploded resembled in size and shape the water tank that he first repaired. In answer to a question, on cross-examination, as to how the said accident happened, the plaintiff testified: “I stated that Mr. Ballou brought in this tank, I presumed it was a water tank, and laid it aside the forge, and we conversed over repairing it. He said,- — he stated that the tank had to go out within an hour or thereabouts, and I stated that it would be impossible to make it, — repair it, in that given time, that the tank had to be taken apart and reinforced on the inside, soldered on the inside. After that he stated it had to go and had to give a demonstration. I stated it was impossible. Mr. Ballou, — he says, ‘ it has got to be,’ and took up the tank and laid it on my bench within four or five inches of this burning gas forge, and walked out; ” and further, in answer to the question: “You hadn’t started to do anything on it at all? Ans. No, sir; I just simply laid down a piece of the lamp I was repairing, and I put my knee up like this (indicates) to brace the tank while I worked on it, and just picked up my knife to make some scratches around some rivets to clean up the metal so as to make the metallic edges join to *608 gether when the explosion took place. ... Q It never-occurred to you it might be a gasoline tank at all? Ans. It didn’t. I was very busy. I was the man to make the repair. Q. There was sufficient gasoline, you say, to cause an explosion? Ans. ' Yes, sir; a teaspoonful in there would cause an explosion. Q. If there was a teaspoonful in there, and it caused an explosion, would it indicate it was there to any of your senses? Ans. Indicate that the gas or gasoline was in the tank? Q. Yes. Ans. Nothing that I knew; I knew of no gasoline being in the tank. Q. Did you ever smell gasoline?' Ans. The shop was full of the odor. Q. That machine shop over there is so full of gasoline that you could not distinguish anything? Ans. I could not. Q. Is that your testimony?' Ans. It was so full in my system, being accustomed to smelling that odor, I could not detect anything as readily as a man coming: from the outside could detect the fumes, which were so strong, from the explosion in the cylinders to even hurt your eyes. I called that to Mr. Ballou, how it smarted my eyes there at times.”
The nonsuit was therefore improperly granted.
The plaintiff’s exception is sustained, and the case is remitted to the Superior Court for a new trial.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
73 A. 374, 29 R.I. 606, 1909 R.I. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-davis-automobile-company-ri-1909.