Daniel Ozark, Individually and as Next Friend for Dwain Ozark, a Minor v. Wichita Manor, Incorporated, and City of Wichita Falls, Texas

252 F.2d 671, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3747
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1958
Docket16788
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 252 F.2d 671 (Daniel Ozark, Individually and as Next Friend for Dwain Ozark, a Minor v. Wichita Manor, Incorporated, and City of Wichita Falls, Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel Ozark, Individually and as Next Friend for Dwain Ozark, a Minor v. Wichita Manor, Incorporated, and City of Wichita Falls, Texas, 252 F.2d 671, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3747 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.

The sole question here is whether the Court erred in not giving suitable instructions to the jury on the theory of res ipsa loquitur. Without such instructions the jury on a general charge returned a general verdict for the defendants.

Dwain Ozark, then six years old, sustained severe injuries including the total loss of an eye when a one-half gallon glass milk bottle exploded. The evidence was such as to permit the jury to conclude that the bottle exploded, and that this occurred when the little boy, after putting the open neck of the bottle over an outside water hydrant-faucet, opened the faucet from which air or water, or both, suddenly came under great and unusual pressure with sufficient violence to shatter the bottle and scatter it in small pieces over an area of fifteen feet.

Starting with this event of destruction of the bottle from excessive pressure, the plaintiffs proceeded to demonstrate through evidence which the jury could credit why each of the two defendants 1 *673 had an actual and legal responsibility for the resulting injury.

In the rear of one of the apartment buildings and near the one containing the Ozarks’ unit was a wash house with laundry facilities available for the tenants’ use. Some time prior to July 6, 1954, the date of the accident, a leak had developed in a line running to or in the wash house. This line admittedly belonged to Manor. The City had a service line which ran from a principal water main in a nearby street and then through this apartment project. There were separate meters for each individual apartment unit. The service line up through each meter as well as the meters were the property of the City. The City had the responsibility for maintenance and repair of this service line and the meters even though located on Manor’s premises. The line from the meter to and in each separate apartment was the property of Manor. It had the responsibility for upkeep, maintenance and repair of such facilities.

When Manor’s employee, the apartment manager and general superintendent, attempted to repair the leak in Manor’s line, he found that he could not cut off the water at the meter leading from the City’s service line to the wash house. The cutoff valve in the City’s meter was defective and would not close. Consequently, he called the City Water Department whose supervisory employee inspected the meter, found the valve stuck and out of order and arranged for laborers who would, and shortly did, replace the defective valve. This meter, of which the stop valve was a part, was in a meter box set in the ground. To do this job, it was necessary to dig around and then remove the meter box, disconnect the pipes on both sides of the meter, remove the defective valve, replace it with a sound one, reconnect the pipes to the meter, and put it back in the meter box.

Of course, before the meter could be disconnected, it was necessary to cut off the water supply to that meter. That was done by closing two valves. One was a master valve at the place where the service line tied onto the water main, and the other was a main valve in the City’s service line on Manor’s premises at a point beyond the defective meter. Notwithstanding both of these valves were tightly closed and would thus presumably hold the vacuum preventing the loss of any water, it was undisputed that when the meter was disconnected, there was a drainage of ten to fifteen gallons of water from this service line. It is this loss which was of likely critical significance from a mechanical standpoint.

When the stop valve was replaced and the meter reconnected, the two master valves were opened. But neither the City’s employees nor Manor’s superintendent, who was in close touch with all of these activities, made any effort whatsoever to “bleed” the line of air even though, with the drainage from this service line, there was a likelihood that air was present.

Expert witnesses, whose competence is not here challenged, appeared for both sides. From this testimony it appeared almost undisputed that pressure in the City’s service line and in the adjacent one-inch line from meters to apartment outlets was about 70 to 75 psi. The City’s expert did not undertake categorically or inferentially to dispute the main theme 2 of plaintiffs’ expert that in all *674 probability it was pressure from this air being compressed that gave the explosive driving force to the water or air as it first came out of the hydrant when opened by the little boy.

While this was not expressly contradicted, the jury was not compelled to accept this opinion. Concessions and questioned hypothesis, typical of cross examination of an expert, plus factual evidence from some tenants on the possible opening of other faucets on the line between the time of the completion of the repair job and Dwain’s injury, permitted the jury to accept or reject its teaching. But it was.probative evidence available for consideration by the jury under adequate instructions.

In the Court’s charge to the jury, the negligence specifically alleged — failure to bleed off the air — was expressly submitted. But the Court declined the request to instruct the jury on the nature and application of the theory of res ipsa loqui-tur. The jury was thus not told that under the certain circumstances and conditions indigenous to this theory the happening of the accident could itself be considered as proof of negligence.

It is difficult for us to see what was the rationale of the Trial Court’s refusal. Apparently it thought that if the accident would have happened had these circumstances been repeated the day before or the day after, there would be an insufficient showing that it “ * * wouldn’t'happen in the ordinary course of things.” 3 This, we believe, is a basic misapprehension of the theory. The doctrine comes into play not because the event or result would or would not occur. The theory applies because the circumstances are such as to justify the inference that if the event occurs, it would not ordinarily happen unless the actor was negligent.

If the refusal was because the Court thought that the probable cause had been fully identified as excessive air pressure not properly bled off resulting from the manner of making the repairs, this would not prevent the application of the doctrine. If the occurrence is such that it ordinarily would not take place without negligence, the basis for that inference is strengthened, not weakened, by evidence which points strongly to the mechanism of harm and causation. 4

Here on the evidence the jury could reasonably find that the bottle shattered from an explosive force and that this force was caused by the sudden release of excessive air pressure within the water lines of this apartment project. We think also that the jury, from the ordinary experience of men, .could infer that *675 water from a hydrant at the ordinary usual pressure would not explode a milk bottle or similar glass bottle.

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252 F.2d 671, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-ozark-individually-and-as-next-friend-for-dwain-ozark-a-minor-v-ca5-1958.