Freeman v. Nickerson

174 P.2d 688, 77 Cal. App. 2d 40, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 924
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 1946
DocketCiv. 13047
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 174 P.2d 688 (Freeman v. Nickerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Nickerson, 174 P.2d 688, 77 Cal. App. 2d 40, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 924 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*43 SCHOTTKY, J. pro tem.

Respondent-wife suffered burns upon her hands, face and neck as the result of an explosion that followed her deposit of highly combustible and explosive sawdust, accumulated during a sanding operation performed after a hardwood floor was installed, into a garbage incinerator chute situated on the first floor of appellants’ apartment house. Respondents commenced an action against appellants to recover for the personal injuries sustained by the wife while engaged in performing contract services in appellants’ apartment house and for medical expenses incurred by respondent-husband. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of respondents for $12,500. Appellants’ motion for a new trial was denied. This appeal is from the judgment entered upon the verdict.

Appellants urge the following as grounds for the reversal of the judgment: (1) Insufficiency of the evidence on appellants’ negligence; (2) That respondents were guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law; (3) Prejudicial misconduct of respondent-husband and his counsel in bringing to the jury’s attention the fact that defendants were insured; (4) Grossly excessive damages; (5) Error in giving and refusing instructions.

Before proceeding to discuss these contentions of appellants, we shall give a brief summary of the evidence.

Appellants, husband and wife, owned a three story, 27-unit apartment house at 624 Brooklyn Avenue, Oakland—all apartments therein being occupied on the date of the incident herein involved (August 21, 1944). Respondent-husband was an independent contractor engaged in the business of installing hardwood floors, and he was engaged by defendant-wife to install some hardwood flooring in one of the apartments. (There is no dispute concerning the authority of the wife to make such contract—she being the active manager of the premises while her husband had outside employment.)

Respondent-wife was in the habit of working with her husband on his jobs, and she was assisting him in doing the work required under his agreement with appellants. The job was commenced on Tuesday, August 15, 1944, six days before the date of the injury to respondent-wife. Neither of the respondents worked there on that first day (Tuesday), but they had another contractor, S. M. Pierce, doing the original floor laying on that day. The wife, however, worked on Wed *44 nesday (August 16)—helping to “lay the floors” and “set nails. ’ ’

As part of the floor-laying process, respondents used a mechanical device lmown as a “sander” or “sanding machine.” This device resembles, in appearance and operation, a vacuum cleaner—with sawdust of a fine, “floury” consistency being sucked up into a bag attachment.

There is expert testimony (of respondents’ witness, John Finn) that although this “oak dust” or sawdust is not spontaneously combustible until it is subject to heat of 600 degrees, if it is poured upon an open flame it will ignite and explode, and the “flame will follow up the path you are dropping the dust down.”

It is uncontradicted that both respondent-wife and respondent-husband were fully aware of the dangerously explosive and incendiary nature of the product of their “sanding” operations, if poured on an open flame.

Appellants’ apartment house was equipped with a brick garbage incinerator (apparently on the basement floor) which was about three feet square and about five feet high. The garbage chute or chimney thereto ran up through the three floors of the building, with an opening on each floor set off from the common hallways and situated in a closet (on each floor) about four feet square and nine feet high. The chute opening on each floor was fitted with a scoop or hopper which fitted into the chute opening, and into which the garbage was deposited. When that hopper was placed in its closed position, the garbage would then drop from the base of the receptacle down into the incinerator. The incinerator and chute were in good condition at the time of the accident. Appellants’ expert, H. E. R. Dannett, testified that the bottom or “shield” of the hopper—which closed the chute opening and kept the garbage deposited from passing down into the incinerator until the hopper was put into its “closed” position —was a “safety measure to prevent any smoke or flame coming through . . . that opening when the door is open.”

Respondent-wife was aware that the “chute” into which she deposited the “oak dust” was an “incinerator chute” rather than a “wet garbage” chute. She also knew that tenants would be dropping garbage down the chute “all of the time,” but did not think the tenants would be dropping “lighted cigarettes” into the chute.

*45 Respondent-wife testified that the sanding machine was “set up” on Wednesday afternoon (August 16) just before the conclusion of their day’s work, but that the real sanding operations were not started until Thursday. Mr. Pierce operated the sander. The oak dust which accumulated that morning was emptied by Pierce from the bag into two or three pasteboard boxes. “Around noon” on that day respondent-wife heard appellant-wife ask Mr. Freeman “what he was going to do with the dust.” Pie told her to have the garbage man carry it away; to which Mrs. Nickerson replied that “she didn’t much like to do that” and asked if she “couldn’t empty it into the incinerator down the hall.” According to Mrs. Freeman, her husband said, “Well, you can’t put it there if there is a fire in the incinerator because it is dangerously explosive if emptied on an open fire”; after which appellant-wife said, “Well, it will be perfectly all right to empty it there because there is no fire in the incinerator except on Friday.” Respondent-wife also testified that appellant then showed Mr. Freeman where the incinerator chute was located on the first floor (where the work was being done), and right after that both respondents carried the three boxes containing the oak dust to the chute and the husband dumped the dust into the incinerator.

Respondent-husband testified to that identical conversation had between himself and appellant, and fixed Pierce and respondent-wife as being present at the conversation. He was very positive in his testimony that he told Mrs. Nickerson of the danger of throwing the dust on an open flame, and in her reply thereto that a fire was “built” in the incinerator “only on Fridays.” Pierce, respondent-husband’s associate, also testified that he heard the identical statements testified to as above noted by both respondents. He also knew that the oak dust would explode if scattered over an open flame. He testified that Freeman dumped “two or three boxes” into the chute on “Thursday morning,” and he himself dumped some out of the “bag” in the afternoon and nothing happened.

Appellant-wife denied that the conversation above discussed took place between herself and Mr. Freeman. She said that Mr. Freeman met her in the hallway and asked her “Where is the incinerator so I can dispose of my refuse, ’ ’ and that she replied, “Here is the incinerator, but be careful, don’t clog it up, we don’t want any smoke.” She testified that that *46 conversation took place during the “forenoon” on Thursday. She also testified that she was not aware of the inflammable and explosive nature of the oak dust, that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 688, 77 Cal. App. 2d 40, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-nickerson-calctapp-1946.