Frazier v. Ayres

20 So. 2d 754, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 280
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1945
DocketNo. 6777.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 So. 2d 754 (Frazier v. Ayres) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier v. Ayres, 20 So. 2d 754, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 280 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Oscar Lee Frazier, one of the plaintiffs herein, was seriously injured and his son, John Phillip Frazier, aged eight and one-half years, fatally injured, from an explosion in his home of a mixture of gasoline and kerosene he purchased from Russell T. Dupree, owner and operator of a filling station in the village of Bentley, Louisiana. He sues to recover damages sustained by him individually, and he and his wife, Una Frazier, sue for additional damages on account of the son's death. Richardson Ayres, Jack Sistrunk and Albert Clark of Rapides Parish and Dupree are impleaded as defendants against whom judgment in solido for a large amount is sought.

The material facts of the case, with one exception, are undisputed.

Ayres is a distributor or jobber of petroleum products in the City of Alexandria, Louisiana. Dupree is a retailer of such products and was a patron of Ayres. Late in the afternoon of December 3, 1942, Ayres' tank truck in charge of Sistrunk, with Clark as helper, arrived at Dupree's filling station to deliver into his tanks gasoline and kerosene. The tank consisted of five compartments, three of which were full, one with white gasoline, one with red gasoline and the third with kerosene. Dupree's gasoline tank was underground. Gasoline was run into it through a hose attached to a compartment of Ayres' tank. When it was thought that all the gasoline desired by Dupree or to which he was then entitled, in view of rationing, had been transferred into his tank, being the entire content of one of the compartments, the truck was backed close to the entrance of a room near the station wherein a 120 gallon capacity kerosene tank, above the ground, was located. Sistrunk removed the cover to the opening in the tank at the top end, looked into it and estimated that it was about one-half full. In order to know the exact quantity necessary to fill it, he decided to use five gallon cans or containers. When the first container was filled Clark carried it to Sistrunk who began to pour the liquid into the tank and when about one-half of it had been poured he detected an odor as of gasoline. Examination revealed that the can contained pure gasoline. It was then discovered that the entire content of the compartment containing kerosene had been put into the gasoline tank. Dupree, who to that time had been in his residence adjacent to the station, was called to the front and Sistrunk and Clark say that the two errors were then made known to him, but Dupree denies that they or either of them told him that the kerosene tank had any gasoline in it.

After these men ceased their discussion of the matter Dupree closed the gasoline pump and locked the mechanism to prevent sales therefrom until the error could be corrected. He took no precaution to prevent sales from the kerosene tank. Sistrunk and Clark drove off. Dupree was advised by Sistrunk not to sell any of the contaminated liquid in the gasoline tank and was assured that it would be promptly removed therefrom so that pure gasoline could be put in it. This was not done, however, until after the tragic accident that cost the life of plaintiffs' young son.

At the close of business Saturday night, December 5th, practically all of the content of the kerosene tank had been sold by Dupree or his employees to various customers; in fact, all of it that the pump would lift had been sold. Plaintiff, Oscar Lee Frazier, without any knowledge of what had happened, purchased from Dupree for domestic purposes, eight gallons of the mixture believing it to be kerosene.

Early in the morning of December 6th, plaintiffs' daughter, aged thirteen, got out *Page 756 of bed, assembled some pine splinters, pine and oak wood in a medium sized box heater in the bedroom in which her father was sleeping, set fire thereto with a match and assuming that the fire would develop properly, returned to bed. After the lapse of not more than thirty minutes Oscar Lee Frazier got out of bed, followed by his young son, and proceeded to the heater. It was not giving off the expected heat. He opened its top and door and satisfied himself that the fire had "gone out". He testified that after having done this he got a gallon can of the liquid purchased from Dupree and poured about one-half pint of it on the wood in the stove. He then turned with can in hand to procure a match with which to start the fire, and had moved not more than five feet when an explosion occurred in the stove. The flames therefrom reached the open can, still in his hand, causing another explosion. Burning liquid was scattered over the room and upon him and his boy who was by his side. The can was knocked from his hand.

Plaintiffs' suit as against Sistrunk and Clark is predicated upon their alleged gross negligence in putting gasoline in the kerosene tank and allowing it to remain therein after discovery of the mistake. Ayres is sued, of course, because he was the principal of Sistrunk and Clark and is responsible for their negligence. The suit as against Dupree is predicated upon his alleged failure, after learning that kerosene had been put in his gasoline tank, to make proper investigation and check of the kerosene tank to ascertain if gasoline had been erroneously put therein. Plaintiffs do not charge Dupree with knowledge that gasoline was by mistake put into his kerosene tank.

Dupree did not file answer. As to him, issue was joined by default but the trial judge overlooked this fact and in written reasons for judgment stated that as issue had not been joined judgment affecting this defendant one way or other could not be rendered. Counsel of plaintiffs has fallen into the same error. The other defendants answered; that of Sistrunk and Clark being joint. The answers are substantially the same. All defendants admit that 120 gallons of kerosene were erroneously put in the gasoline tank and that about two and one-half gallons of gasoline were put in the kerosene tank before the errors were discovered. They all aver that Dupree was admonished by Sistrunk not to sell any of the mixture from either tank and that Sistrunk told him he or some other agent of Ayres would return promptly and pump the mixture from the tanks. They specially aver that notwithstanding said admonition, and with full knowledge that the gasoline had been poured into the kerosene tank, Dupree sold portions of its contents to several of his customers, including Oscar Lee Frazier. They plead that the small quantity of gasoline put in the kerosene tank did not increase the combustible and inflammable potentialities of the mixture above that of kerosene; that the act of Frazier in pouring some of the mixture on the wood in the heater, knowing that a fire had been started therein a few minutes prior, was gross negligence and carelessness on his part, and constituted the proximate cause of the accident. These defendants plead alternatively that if the mixture in the kerosene tank was more dangerous from a standpoint of combustion or explosion than was pure kerosene, the action of Dupree in selling same with full knowledge of the character of the mixture, was an independent act of negligence from that of the other defendants, and, as such, became and was the proximate cause of the accident. This phase of the defense, in effect, is tantamount to saying that Dupree's negligence, being independent and intervening, broke the chain of causation and thereby the original negligence of Sistrunk and Clark, if any, became the remote cause of the accident.

Further, in the alternative, these defendants plead in bar of recovery by Oscar Lee Frazier, his own negligence and carelessness in the respects above stated.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against Ayres, Sistrunk and Clark, in solido for $6,000, and in favor of Oscar Lee Frazier, individually, and against said defendants in solido for $7,500, and costs.

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Bluebook (online)
20 So. 2d 754, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-ayres-lactapp-1945.