Grace Elaine McC Butler, as Administratrix of the Estate of John Carlton Butler, Deceased v. L. Sonneborn Sons, Inc.

296 F.2d 623, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3144
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 1961
Docket26905_1
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 296 F.2d 623 (Grace Elaine McC Butler, as Administratrix of the Estate of John Carlton Butler, Deceased v. L. Sonneborn Sons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grace Elaine McC Butler, as Administratrix of the Estate of John Carlton Butler, Deceased v. L. Sonneborn Sons, Inc., 296 F.2d 623, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3144 (2d Cir. 1961).

Opinion

FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge.

Defendant in this diversity of citizenship action for wrongful death appeals from a judgment for $57,500, entered in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, after trial before Judge Murphy and a jury. 1 21 The grounds relied on are alleged insufficiency of evidence of negligence, errors in the charge and refusals to charge, and contributory negligence of decedent as a matter of law. We affirm.

Defendant has for many years manufactured in New Jersey, and marketed on a nation-wide scale, a liquid floor hardening material called Lapidolith. *624 For some thirty years the compound has been packaged in large steel drums. It was well known that contact between the liquid, itself noninflammable, and the steel would cause corrosion and the generation of free hydrogen, capable of being ignited by the smallest spark. To guard against these hazards the drums were coated with a protective lining, a precaution satisfactory unless the lining were damaged or dislodged. Each drum bore a label identifying the product as “Lapidolith, A Sonneborn Building Saver, The Patented Liquid Chemical Hardener for Concrete and Terrazzo Floors” and cautioning “Poison. Must not be used internally. Keep from freezing.”

Defendant had won a subcontract to supply Lapidolith for a new warehouse at the United States Naval Air Station at Cherry Point, North Carolina, which was being built by Conn Structors as general contractor. Conn Structors had previously purchased drums of Lapidolith from defendant for use on another job, in South Carolina, eleven of which remained unused. Conn Structors having requested a credit for these drums, defendant agreed they might be used at the new job “providing the drums are unopened and in good condition.” Accordingly Conn Structors shipped the drums from South Carolina to itself at Cherry Point. When they arrived, Wollard, Conn Structors’ labor foreman, thought they looked “beat up” and “didn’t have no new paint on ’em.” Later Wollard found two of them leaking from the bottom. After they were turned upside down, holes were found in the bottom of each. Wollard asked the plumbing and heating subcontractor to furnish someone to weld the leaks. Butler was assigned. A sample of the contents was taken and tested for inflammability, with negative results; Smith, the subcontractor’s fox-e-man, also looked for warning labels and found none. Butler welded the first drum without incident. When he was engaged in striking his torch to weld the second, the drum blew up and Butler was killed.

On the issue of liability, plaintiff relied on the depositions of pollard and Smith, and also of Sinclair, a safety engineer employed by the Marine Corps. His examination of the exploded drum disclosed that parts of the protective lining had been worn off for some time and the steel had become corroded; his conclusion was that the reaction of the liquid and the metal had built up sufficient hydrogen to cause an explosion, either from the heat left in the torch after the welding of the first bax*rel, or from the spark of the torch, or from a combination of the two. Defendant called two witnesses. An employee testified that, in his experience of fox’ty years, although “the mechanics will smoke, light matches, * * we have never encountered the slightest difficulty with Lapidolith on any job.” An engineer, who was a member of the Amexncan Welding Society, gave expert testimony that the procedure followed by Butler was unsafe.

The Interstate Commerce Comxnission, acting under authority conferred primarily by 18 U.S.C. § 835, has promulgated detailed regulations, 49 C.F.R. Parts 71-78, to be observed by shippers in order “To promote the uniform enforcement of law and to minimize the dangers to life and property incident to the transportation of explosives and other dangerous articles by common carriers engaged in interstate or foreign commerce,” 49 C.F.R. § 73.1(a). ICC Reg. § 73.402 inquires labels, of vaxfious texts and colors as therein provided, for “any dangerous article as defined by Parts 71-78.” Lapidolith, in view of its conceded chemical properties, seems to be a corrosive liquid under § 73.240, so that, under § 72.2 it must be shipped in compliance with the regulations. The required label appears to be the white label listed in § 73.407(2) :

Caution Do Not
Corrosive Liquid Drop
Do not load with Explosives or near articles bearing Yellow labels

The judge reserved decision on a motion .by defendant for a directed verdict' at the close of plaintiff’s case and again *625 at the end of the whole case; after the verdict for the plaintiff, he denied a motion to set it aside.

In his charge Judge Murphy referred to the plaintiff’s claim that defendant sho.uld have had on the drum “some sign or legend to the effect that warning was given to keep it away from heat or fire,” and to the I. C. C. requirement that a barrel containing acid or caustic fluid must contain a label “with the word ‘Caution’ in rather' large letters in the center of the label and the words ‘Acid’ or ‘Caustic Fluid’ prominently displayed,” which he later supplemented, at plaintiff’s request, with the words, “Do not drop.” He said, “the first question that you have to decide is whether the absence of either the required label under the I. C. C. regulations or the warning label that plaintiff suggests was negligent conduct on the part of the defendant.” Continuing, he charged that the jury must decide in the first place “whether, in the exercise of due care, the defendant manufacturer should have foreseen the contingency of the lining wearing or tearing away without its fault, and to guard against any danger that might thus be created. Should they have placed warning labels of some kind on the drums as regards the proximity of flame or heat?” If the jury so decided, “then your next question is one of proximate cause, that is, whether defendant could reasonably have foreseen this type of accident. In other words, was the defendant’s conduct such that the reasonable and prudent man would have foreseen the possibility of the lining breaking, hydrogen forming, and someone coming in contact with it by means of fire or heat.” In the event of a finding favorable to plaintiff, then you must also find in this ease that but for the absence of the label, that is, the I. C. C. label or the label that was suggested by the plaintiff, that the decedent would not have come into close proximity to the drums with his acetylene equipment, with spark, heat or flame, whatever you find from the evidence was the case, and that his coming into proximity in fact was the cause of the accident.” Finally, in order to bring in a verdict for the plaintiff, the jury must find that decedent was not contributorily negligent. Appellant took an exception “to the charge that refers in any way, shape, manner, or form to the I. C. C. requirement,” and other exceptions not material, as well as excepting to the judge’s refusal to charge certain requests.

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296 F.2d 623, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grace-elaine-mcc-butler-as-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-john-carlton-ca2-1961.