Fjellman v. Weller

7 N.W.2d 521, 213 Minn. 457, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 24, 1942
DocketNo. 33,229.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 7 N.W.2d 521 (Fjellman v. Weller) 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
Fjellman v. Weller, 7 N.W.2d 521, 213 Minn. 457, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 541 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

Streissguth, Justice.

Action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained as the result of an explosion of vapors in an unused, underground gasoline storage tank installed in a public alley in the city of Mankato.

Before the close of plaintiff’s case, he voluntarily dismissed the action as to defendant city, and at the close of his case he voluntarily dismissed as to defendant S. Howard Weller, the owner of adjoining premises and lessee of the tank. The motion for a directed verdict of defendant Miller Motor Company, wholesale distributor for the defendant Socony-Vacuum Oil Company, Inc., was granted at the close of plaintiff’s case. The court denied a similar motion made at the same time by the oil company. It thereupon offered proof in defense and, at the close of all the proof, renewed its motion, which was again denied. The jury returned a verdict for $10,000. The appeal is from an order denying the oil com *460 pany’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for new trial.

Defendant Weller had for many years conducted a hardware store and tire and battery shop in a building owned by him in Mankato. About 1924 he contracted with the White Eagle Oil and Kefining Company to sell its products, and that company thereupon installed a gasoline pump on the curb in front of his building and a connecting gasoline storage tank in a public alley on the side of his building. In 1930 this company installed a second pump and tank, which is the one here involved. This tank was also placed in the alley but back of the first tank. Licenses or permits for the installation and subsequent use of the pumps and tanks were in each instance applied for by agents of the oil company but issued by the city to and in the name of Weller. The license fees were paid by the oil company, and its employes installed the pumps and tanks.

At the time of the second installation, a formal lease was entered into between Weller and the oil company. Though the lease reserved an annual rental of one dollar, no rent was in fact ever demanded or paid. Weller was told at the time he signed the lease that the purpose thereof was to show that the property belonged to the oil company. He did not read the agreement and received no copy thereof.

The lease contained no covenant on the part of either party to make repairs. It contained a clause that the property was leased “only for the purpose of storage and distributing Petroleum Products purchased from * * * [lessor], and if used for any other purpose than that herein specified then * * * [lessor] shall have the right to declare this agreement null and void and said * * * [lessor] is hereby given the privilege and right without notice to * * * [lessee] to enter upon the premises * * *, and remove therefrom said equipment.” Also in the lease was a covenant that the lessee “agrees to indemnify and save harmless said * * * [lessor] of and from any and all claims for liability for any and all loss, damage, injury or other casualty to persons or property caused or *461 occasioned by any leakage, fire or explosion of or from said equipment, or the appliances connected or used therewith, or through any imperfection in the construction, installation or operation of the same, whether due to negligence of the * * * [lessor], or otherwise.”

In 1934 defendant Socony-Vacuum Oil Company, Inc. acquired all the property theretofore owned by the White Eagle Oil and Refining Company, including the pumps and tanks referred to, and the lease was formally assigned to and assumed by the So cony company, the successor corporation. Each of the oil companies will be referred to indiscriminately as the “oil company,” except as a distinction becomes necessary.

Weller continued to purchase gasoline directly from the oil company up to and including December 1938. He used the tank nearest the street for “Mobilgas” and the other tank for “Metrogas,” a lower priced product. His last purchase of “Metrogas” was on June 15, 1937. About the same time he notified the company that he would not “use the Metro any more or use that tank [the one here involved], * * * it wasn’t of any use” to him. Shortly thereafter all gasoline was pumped out of the second tank, and it was never refilled. Weller did, however, continue to buy and sell “Mobilgas.” Notwithstanding that “Metrogas” was no longer being sold, neither the pump used in dispensing it nor the tank in the alley was removed.

In January 1939 the oil company discontinued selling its products directly to retailers at Mankato. Instead, it made a contract with defendant Miller Motor Company to act as its exclusive distributor in the Mankato territory, under the terms of which the oil company was prohibited from making direct sales to retailers in that territory. The Miller company thereafter sold and delivered the products of the oil company on its own account and as an independent dealer rather than as an agent of the oil company, continuing such practice until the time of the trial. Weller had no further dealings directly with the oil company, but he continued to use the “Mobilgas” pump and connecting tank, the pump *462 being painted from year to year by the company without request from or expense to him. The original lease was not formally can-celled. No “Metrogas” was sold to Weller by the Miller company, and the second pump and tank remained unused at all times subsequent to 1937.

On November 17, 1940, plaintiff, George Fjellman, then 14 years of age, with two friends, Donald Scheerz, 12 years of age, and Thomas Clements, 10 years of age, were walking down the street leading to the alley. Plaintiff was lighting some paper matches and throwing them up in the air, and the boys watched the pattern of smoke made by the matches as they fell without particularly observing where they landed. Shortly afterward they turned into the alley. When they were about in the vicinity of the unused storage tank, of which they were unaware and which they did not observe, plaintiff threw up a match, and within a moment an explosion occurred.

Black smoke and debris caused by the explosion went as high as the two-story Weller building. The explosion was caused by the ignition of vapors in the tank and was confined to a blast through the fill pipe, the tank and fill pipe remaining intact. Plaintiff received the full force of the blast on his face and hands. The nature of his injuries indicated definitely that his position at the time of the explosion was directly over the pipe. After the explosion he was found lying near the entrance of the alley into the street.

Dr. L. A. Ford, an expert, explained in some detail the action of gasoline and its vapors in tanks and the persistence of explosive vapors in tanks from which gasoline has been removed, such vapors being heavier than air. He testified there would be a small quantity of vapors escaping from the tank at all times under the circumstances here existing and that an explosion could occur, either in the tank or at the outlet, through actual contact between the vapor and a flame.

The tank which exploded had a three-inch fill or intake pipe with a hinged cover, which when closed projected about three *463 inches above the surface of the alley.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.W.2d 521, 213 Minn. 457, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fjellman-v-weller-minn-1942.