D'Hoodge v. McCann

443 P.2d 747, 151 Mont. 353, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 322
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1968
Docket11378
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 443 P.2d 747 (D'Hoodge v. McCann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Hoodge v. McCann, 443 P.2d 747, 151 Mont. 353, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 322 (Mo. 1968).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE HASWELL

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by defendants from a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $47,000 rendered upon a jury verdict in a personal injury action in the district court of Blaine County.

Plaintiff is Robert Rick D’Hoodge, a twenty-year old ranch hand employed by defendants, who sustained severe burns in the course of his employment while cleaning the engine block on a tractor. He was using a wall paper brush and a pail of gasoline furnished by his employer to accomplish this job when a fire suddenly broke out. Defendants are James McCann, Sr. and James McCann, Jr., father and son, who operate a ranch about five miles east of Harlem where the accident occurred.

Plaintiff was a high school graduate who had been employed by defendants as a ranch hand for seven or eight months prior to the accident forming the basis of the instant case. He had displayed some mechanical ability and was frequently assigned to cleaning and repairing farm machinery. As a result of this work, as well as four years of vocational agriculture courses in high school, previous experience assisting his father who was a mechanic in a commercial garage in Harlem, and some previous work on another ranch, he had learned that certain safety, precautions must be taken when gasoline is used to clean machinery including no smoking, doing the cleaning in the open air, not doing it around live wires, not putting gasoline on a hot motor, and not using a wire brush for cleaning with gasoline; he also knew that there was a safer commercial solvent than gasoline for such cleaning and had used it to clean [356]*356parts in Ms vocational agrienltnral classes and at the commercial garage where his father worked; he did not mention this commercial solvent to defendants. Defendants were not aware of a safer commercial solvent for cleaning nor of its availability in the area. Defendants furnished gasoline and various brushes for this purpose, knew that their employees were using them to clean and repair machiner, used them for such purposes themselves, and indicated this was a customary practice on ranches in their area.

Defendant McCann, Jr., a 37 year old man at the time of the trial, had been engaged in active operation of the ranch where the accident occurred for six years prior to the accident. This was a 30,000 acre ranch on which they ran 3,500 to 4,000 sheep, 100 cattle, and farmed some irrigated grain land. They employed an average of 3 or 4 ranch hands the year around. Mc-Cann, Jr. was a college graduate with a Bachelor of Science degree in agriculture. During his high school education he had taken a course in vocational agriculture and in college had studied farm and ranch management, vocations agriculture, vocational engineering, farm machinery, chemistry and physics.

During the afternoon of June 5th, 1965, plaintiff was engaged in repairing a tractor on a concrete slab in an open area in the yard of the ranch. He had taken the head off the engine, procured a wall paper brush from the rack, a pail which he filled with gasoline, and was dipping the brush in the gasoline and brushing it over the top of the engine block preparatory to installing a new head gasket. After two or three applications, a fire suddenly broke out over everything including himself. Plaintiff tried to put out the fire by rolling on the ground which proved ineffective, so he ran to a chicken bath about fifty feet away, jumped in, and extinguished the flames. Plaintiff sustained extensive burns as a result of this accident.

Plaintiff filed suit against defendants, based on defendants’ negligence consisting of a breach of duty on their part by reason of their failure to provide safe appliances, equipment [357]*357and materials for nse of their employee in cleaning and repairing farm machinery. Defendants denied any negligence on their part and claimed contributory negligence and assumption of risk on the part of plaintiff employee barring any recovery by him. Jury trial was held in the district court of Blaine County. Evidence introduced at the trial in addition to the facts set forth above indicated that diesel fuel and stove oil were also available at the ranch for cleaning machinery but were considered unsatisfactory for that purpose; that the engine block on the tractor was not hot when gasoline was applied with a brush; that plaintiff had not spilled gasoline on his clothes prior to the fire. The only explanation as to the cause of the fire was expert opinion evidence in response to a hypothetical question by Donald Fotheringham, a Canadian petroleum engineer, who suggested that the fire could have been caused by a static spark created by agitation of gasoline in the pail on removel of the wall paper brush therefrom. Evidence also indicated that plaintiff was unaware of static electricity causing combustion of gasoline vapors or of the risks, dangers or hazards of igniting a gasoline fire in this manner.

During the course of trial defendants moved for a mistrial when plaintiff, in response to a general question by his own counsel on re-direct examination, mentioned insurance. The trial judge cut off his testimony, struck it, admonished the jury to ignore it, and denied defendants’ motion for a mistrial.

At the conclusion of all of the evidence, defendants moved for a directed verdict which was denied. Following an 8-4 jury verdict for plaintiff heretofore mentioned and subsequent denial of defendants’ motion for new trial, defendants appealed from, the judgment.

Although defendants present four issues for review and plaintiff, although not appealing, presents four additional issues for review by way of claimed compensating error, it is unnecessary to discuss each individually. In our view there [358]*358are only two basic questions necessary to determination of this appeal: (1) does the reference to insurance constitute reversible error under the circumstances disclosed in the instant case ? (2) is plaintiff entitled to judgment as a matter of law ? We will also briefly discuss the matter of jury instructions.

On the issue of injection of insurance into the case, plaintiff’s counsel during the course of his examination of the plaintiff’s attending physician, offered in evidence a medical bill of the Havre Clinic for medical services rendered the plaintiff. On the face of this medical bill was shown a partial payment by an insurance company. Defendants objected to its admission in evidence “on the grounds it contains extraneous material which is improper and irrelevant” and the court sustained this objection. Thereupon the following colloquy occurred between the court, plaintiff’s counsel, and defendants’ counsel:

“THE COURT: Are you willing to stipulate that the full amount of the bill was $858.00?
“MR. ORMSETH: That is correct.
“MR. HOYT: Is my offer of proof to admit this in evidence denied?
“THE, COURT: In the present form, yes.
“(by Mr. Hoyt)
“Q. Have you been paid a part of your bill? A. I don’t know.
“Q. Doctor, is this bill on the official paper of the Havre Clinic? A. Yes, sir.
“THE COURT: You are not going to get it in in that form so there is no use in fussing around with it.”

Later during redirect examination of the plaintiff by his ■counsel the following transpired:

“Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
443 P.2d 747, 151 Mont. 353, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dhoodge-v-mccann-mont-1968.