Davis v. Gossett & Sons

118 S.E. 773, 30 Ga. App. 576, 1923 Ga. App. LEXIS 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 10, 1923
Docket14195
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 118 S.E. 773 (Davis v. Gossett & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Gossett & Sons, 118 S.E. 773, 30 Ga. App. 576, 1923 Ga. App. LEXIS 532 (Ga. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Luke, J.

A. F. Gossett & Sons sought to recover damages from the director-general of railroads, operating the railway lines of the Central of Georgia Eailway Company. The allegations of the petition were in substance as follows:, The partnership of Gossett & Sons were operating a fertilizer plant in Griffin, Ga., along the line of the Central of Georgia Eailway Company. Branching off from the main line of the railway company there was a' private spur or side-track, over which cars of material to be used in the [578]*578fertilizer plant were placed for unloading by them; also over this private spur or side-track empty cars were placed, and materials manufactured in the plant were loaded, and from there delivered to the Central of Georgia Railway Company for transportation. On May 19, 1907, A. F. Gossett entered into a contract with the Central of Georgia Railway Company for the construction of a spur-track. A. F. Gossett & Sons were successors in title to the plant of A. F. Gossett, and succeeded to the use of the spur-track. The contract went into elaborate details as to the construction and location, and the exact metes and bounds were minutely shown for the construction of the spur-track, over the lands of Gossett, from whom, by the terms of the contract, an easement was granted to the railway company. One of the provisions of the contract was as follows: “The tenant [Gossett] shall indemnify, save, and hold harmless the railway company, its successors or assigns, from any and all loss, damage, injury, liability, or expense that may accrue to or against it by reason of the destruction of or injury to any buildings, improvements, or any personal property belonging to the tenant, situated upon, or being at or upon said track or right of way, or upon the plant of the tenant, or adjacent thereto, by fire or from any other cause whatsoever,” etc. Subsequently there was another spur-track contract, whereby the original spur-track was to be extended 80 feet in length; and this contract contained the same provisions and stiprdations as to the tenant holding harmless and indemnifying the railway company from loss* or liability by reason of the destruction of the property of the tenant by fire or from any other cause, whether attributable to negligence of the railway company or its employees. Subsequently, but without having entered into any further written contract, plaintiffs and the Central of Georgia Railway Company agreed that the spur-track of 460 feet should be extended an additional distance of 40 feet, and also, by mutual arrangement between the parties, the location of the entire spur-track was changed, it being moved in its entirety a distance of 23 feet eastward. Subsequently, instead of extending the track only 40 feet, the parties agreed in writing that the track be extended 60 feet, and that the construction and the extension of said 60 feet should “be subject in all respects to all the covenants, conditions, and obligations contained in said original agreement of .March 9. 1907, [579]*579as fully and specifically as if all of said covenants, conditions and obligations were set out herein at length.” It was alleged that the new construction of the spur-track entirely changed its location with reference to the buildings and premises, entirely changed the risk, and made an entirely new and different track in a different location, so that the subject-matter of the original contract was completely destroyed. It was further alleged, that, subsequently to the last-mentioned extension of the spur-track, the parties entered into a verbal agreement, without any stipulation as to liability or non-liability, for an additional extension of 33 feet to the spur-track. The destruction of the property by fire, as sued for, occurred on the spur-track after all these extensions, renewals, and changes.

It was alleged that in an ordinary tank-ear in good condition there was shipped from Delaware, Oklahoma, to Anderson Gustafson Company, at Whiting, Indiana, a quantity of casinghead gas, which is a liquid condensate from natural gas, highly explosive and dangerous. Anderson Gustafson Company caused the car to be shipped to Cordele, Georgia, to their own order, S. J. Herring-ton to be notified. The bill of lading issued by the railroad company at Whiting, Indiana, for the shipment by Anderson Gustafson Company bears the following notation: “ Inflammable placards and dome cards applied.” At Cordele, Georgia, the car was reconsigned to Griffin, Georgia, to the order of said S. J. Herrington, Gossett Oil Company to be notified. The same billing was used, the railroad company at Cordele merely inserting the name of the new consignor, consignee, and destination, and striking out the old. Before delivery of the car at Griffin the so-called infammable placards and dome cards were either lost or removed, and there was nothing on the car to indicate its contents except a small tag attached to the wooden sill, bearing the word “ Gasoline.” At Griffin the car, together with another of like nature, was delivered to the Gossett Oil Company by being placed oh a private spur or side-track of the plaintiffs, known as the Gossett side-track. After its delivery, thinking that it contained straight-run gasoline, such as had been' ordered, certain employees of the Gossett Oil Company went upon the car for the purpose of taking a sample, and partly unscrewed, but did not wholly loosen, the dome cap, and, without accomplishing their purpose, for some undisclosed [580]*580reason left the car. Shortly thereafter the pressure in the car caused the cap of the dome to blow off, the vapor spreading over the surrounding territory, causing an explosion and setting fire to the plaintiff’s property, and thus causing the damage complained of.

It was further alleged: that the interstate-commerce commission is authorized by Congress to formulate regulations for the safe transportation of explosives in accord with the best-known practicable means for securing safety in transit, governing the packing, marking, loading, handling while in transit, and the precautions necessary to determine whether the material when offered is in proper condition to transport and pursuant thereto, for the handling of shipments of the character in question, and that the interstate-commerce commission has promulgated the following rulés, which were in effect at the time of the shipment in question, the director-general of the railroads having expressly adopted them: “Carriers that are subject to the act to regulate commerce must not receive shipments of articles defined as dangerous by these regulations when the shipments are not packed, marked, labeled, described, and certified as prescribed herein. The method of manufacture and packing of articles defined as dangerous by these regulations, so far as it affects safe transportation, must be open to inspection by a duly authorized representative of the initial carrier or of the bureau of explosives.” “ Liquid condensates from natural gas or from casinghead gas of oil wells, made either by the compression or absorption process, alone or blended with other petroleum products, must be described as liquefied petroleum gas''when the vapor pressure at 100 degrees Fahrenheit (90 degrees Fahrenheit November 1 to March 1) exceeds 10 pounds per square inch.” In the instant case the pressure in the car exceeded 10 pounds to the square inch. “'When the liquid condensate alone or blended with other petroleum products has a vapor pressure not exceeding 10 pounds per square inch, it must be described as gasoline or casinghead gasoline,” and “must be shipped in metal drums or barrels complying with Specification No.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.E. 773, 30 Ga. App. 576, 1923 Ga. App. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-gossett-sons-gactapp-1923.