Dart v. Pure Oil Co.

27 N.W.2d 555, 223 Minn. 526, 171 A.L.R. 885, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 500
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 9, 1947
DocketNo. 34,073.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 27 N.W.2d 555 (Dart v. Pure Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dart v. Pure Oil Co., 27 N.W.2d 555, 223 Minn. 526, 171 A.L.R. 885, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 500 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, Justice.

This case is here on reargument. Subsequent to the original argument and before any decision was made, there was a change in the personnel of the court. Thereafter and on April 26, 1946, the court ordered the parties involved to submit new briefs and invited a number of attorneys to file briefs as amici curiae.

Plaintiff as administratrix of the estate of her husband, Harry W. Dart, brought an action for damages for his death, alleged to have been caused by an explosion of a mixture of gasoline and kerosene sold to decedent in violation of Minn. St. 1945, §§ 296.01, subd. 4, 296.05, subd. 2, and 296.22, subds. 1, 2, and 3. 2

At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, the court dismissed the action against defendant Jean Dispen, doing business as Dispen’s Grocery, and at the close of all the testimony it directed a verdict in favor of the remaining defendants. From the order denying her motion for new trial, plaintiff appeals.

Defendant Pure Oil Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, is a corporation engaged in operating and conducting a wholesale and retail business for the distribution and sale of petroleum products and operates a bulk plant at Hibbing. Defendant David Sampson is the manager and in charge of the company’s operations at that place. Defendant Jean Dispen operates the Dispen Grocery, hereinafter referred to as the grocery, at Eed Ore or Mitchell Location, in the vicinity of Hibbing, and was a regular purchaser of kerosene delivered by the company.

Prior to his death, decedent, a railroad conductor, lived in a cabin at Mitchell Location. At about 8:30 a. m. on October 16,1943, two employes of the Erickson Lumber Company delivered some lumber and briquets to the premises of decedent. He was alone in the *528 cabin at the time. The Erickson employes awakened him to get instructions as to where to unload the material. After giving some instructions, decedent went back into the cabin and a few minutes later came out partially dressed and remarked: “I have a hard time to get my fire started. * * * Maybe the coal will help to get it going. It is some green wood.” After putting some of the briquets in a bucket he went back into the cabin. About ten minutes thereafter, an explosion occurred in the cabin, described by one employe as “some kind of a commotion in the building. * * * Sounded like just thunder away off,” and by the other employe thus: “I heard a muffled explosion. It seemed more like a jar than an explosion.” And in reply to the question, “Did you hear anything else following that?” he said, “Just heard him scream, that-is all.” When the employes came into the cabin they saw decedent in flames. They got him outside, extinguished the flames by rolling him in the sand, and took him to a hospital, where he died a week later from the burns received in the explosion. On the way to the hospital he stated that ‘die heard that happening to other people but he never thought he would fall for such a thing * * * or such a game.” He also stated to an attending physician that he “poured some kerosene into the fire of a stove and the explosion resulted causing him to be burned severely.” After the firemen extinguished the fire, they discovered that the front part of the cabin was badly scorched and that there was a “blistering” of the woodwork. In the middle of the front room of the cabin was a heating stove, the door of which was found open. The kerosene can used by decedent in attempting to kindle the fire was found about halfway through the door of the stove. The bottom of the can was blown out and its seams weakened by the melting of the solder. The stove was not damaged, and there was no fire in it. Undisturbed was a foundation for a fire of green popple with briquets on top. There was evidence that the wood was “blackened,” “had a little black smoke on it,” “there might have been a little particle of smoke around this — on this green popple and underneath.” Another kerosene can was found outside the cabin. This can, which had been thrown there by decedent’s wife when she *529 cleaned up the cabin after the explosion, contained pure kerosene. Tests also showed that there was pure kerosene in the lamps and in a kerosene stove in the cabin.

Kerosene was kept at the grocery in a 50-gallon barrel. Between August 1, 1913, and October 16, 1913, three deliveries of kerosene were made by the company to the grocery, viz., August 12, September 7, and September 25. Two witnesses testified that they observed decedent going to or from the grocery with a kerosene can about a week or ten days before October 16, the date of the explosion. One of the witnesses testified that he was carrying only one can. Although Jean Dispen testified that the credit book showed decedent’s last purchase to be on September 11, she conceded that he sometimes paid cash for his merchandise. She further stated that the only place she bought kerosene was from the company and that her place was the only place where decedent had purchased kerosene. It further appears that on the afternoon of the day of the explosion she told Mrs. Mildred Lind that she was feeling blue because “You know, he [Dart] bought the kerosene here.”

The company delivered kerosene to the grocery in a truck equipped with a tank consisting of four compartments, the front one of which had a capacity of 100 gallons; the second, 200 gallons; the third, 100 gallons; and the fourth and rear compartment, 100 gallons. It was common practice to alternately carry kerosene and gasoline in the same compartment on the same day or at different times. Reversible tags were placed near each faucet on the rear of the truck. The word “gasoline” appeared on one side of the tag, the word “kerosene” on the other side. When a delivery was made at the grocery, the 50-gallon barrel was filled by the use of two five-gallon cans, one painted red and the other galvanized. Both were used for carrying kerosene and other products.

On October 23, 1913, a week after the explosion and the day of decedent’s death, Mrs. Dispen notified defendant Sampson that she had received a number of complaints about the quality of the kerosene. Before Sampson arrived at the premises on the same day, she told the various customers who had purchased kerosene from the *530 September 25 delivery to return it to her or to pour it out. Some returned tbe kerosene to her, and she poured it back into tbe 50-gal-lon barrel. After the kerosene had been poured back into the barrel, Mrs. Dispen took a sample. This was the sample analyzed by the chemist, who testified that it was an explosive mixture containing some gasoline. The kerosene in the barrel was not the color of ordinary kerosene, but was of an amber hue. Defendant Dispen described it thus: “I termed it skunk oil. * * * That is what it looked like to me, and that is what it smelled like.”

Another customer of the grocery, Ellsworth W. Lind, made his last purchase of kerosene from the store on October 15, 1943, out of the batch last delivered on September 25, 1943. Shortly after the explosion in decedent’s cabin, Lind’s wife had some trouble with this kerosene. Lind stated that the kerosene “didn’t smell like it was real kerosene” and that it “was kind of yellowish in color.” Mildred Lind, his wife, testified that she attempted to kindle a fire in the wood stove.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.W.2d 555, 223 Minn. 526, 171 A.L.R. 885, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dart-v-pure-oil-co-minn-1947.