Grange Mutual Fire Insurance Co. v. Golden Gas Co.

298 P.2d 950, 133 Colo. 537
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 16, 1956
Docket17801
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 298 P.2d 950 (Grange Mutual Fire Insurance Co. v. Golden Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grange Mutual Fire Insurance Co. v. Golden Gas Co., 298 P.2d 950, 133 Colo. 537 (Colo. 1956).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sutton

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiffs in error, plaintiffs in the trial court and hereinafter called plaintiffs or by name, seek review by writ of error of the judgment entered by the district court setting aside the verdicts of a jury and the judgment entered thereon, and entering judgment non obstante veredicto for the defendant. Plaintiffs’ claims are for damages arising out of a fire caused by the alleged negligence of defendant in filling a farm home propane gas tank.

Plaintiff Grange Mutual Fire Insurance Company, under a contract of insurance, paid part of the fire loss which arose and claims rights by subrogation. Plaintiffs Grover J. Alder and Meda Anna Alder were the nonresident owners of the real property located in Jefferson County, Colorado, and owned some of the personal property damaged or destroyed by the fire. Plaintiffs Paul G. Alder and Maxine E. Alder were the occupants of the residence and garage damaged by the fire and were the owners of certain of the personal property destroyed by the fire.

The jury awarded plaintiff insurance company $1827.83; the Paul G. Alders $1242.89; and the Grover J. Alders $192.00.

The evidence discloses that about midday on January *539 13, 1953, defendant’s employee Jackson drove to the Paul G. Alder home to make a delivery of liquid propane gas. The transfer was to be made from defendant’s tank truck by a twenty-five foot hose into a stationary two hundred fifty-gallon storage tank. This tank was located about midway of the house and garage in question and about ten feet out from the house. Plaintiffs Paul G. and Maxine E. Alder were in their living room at the time and saw Jackson drive in and prepare to effect the transfer. Suddenly the hose came loose from the stationary tank and began to whip around spraying the house, garage and ground with liquid propane gas. The Alders ran out their back door to secure their two small children who were playing near the tank and as they reached the outdoors the area around their propane tank exploded into flames. Their estimate of the time lapse from seeing the hose break lose until the explosion occurred was from forty to sixty seconds. Jackson estimated it to be somewhat less. The fire could have been due to any one or more of three causes shown, viz: Defendant’s truck exhaust; a vaporizer on the gas line from the stationary tank to the house; or the wildly whipping hose with its nozzle striking rocks embedded in the ground. These were not mere possibilities, as defendant claims, but actual facts appearing in the evidence and all within the control of defendant who had the duty to unload his dangerous cargo with a high degree of care'.

When the fire started Jackson seized the Alders’ daughter and carried her to safety. Their boy had already escaped. Both Jackson and the daughter received slight burns.

The only conflict in the testimony relating to the attempt to fill the stationary tank is concerning what Jackson was doing after he had coupled the hose to the tank and started the truck’s engine and pump. The Alders testified that he was looking at a piece of their farm machinery forty feet away. Jackson testified he had merely walked around his truck to go back to the sta *540 tionary tank and was about six feet from it when the explosion occurred. He admitted that he had looked at a tractor as he went from the truck to the tank, but testified that he did so only by looking at it enroute to the propane tank and that it was some twenty feet away from the tank.

The net results of the explosion and fire were the losses testified to by some of the plaintiffs at the trial.

Examination as to the cause of the accident after the fire showed that the truck, which had been moved away when the fire started,- had not been damaged; that the stationary propane tank was still intact; that the coupling extending from the stationary tank had broken off at the point where the hose was attached to it; and that a “vaporizer,” which was a small pilot light on the line located about three to four feet from the stationary tank to the house, was burning.

Jackson testified that the gas was “highly flammable” and that there were automatic shutoffs on the truck to stop the flow of gas if something happened to the line in unloading the truck. He also testified as to how quickly he could shut off the flow to the line when necessary, and that the automatic shutoff did not entirely close the feeding line for he admitted that not only did excess gas come out of the line, but that a small amount of gas also went through the check valves. Jackson’s important testimony here was:

“Q. What happened to the automatic shut off? “A. It was not sufficient gas coming out of this small fitting on the end of the hose to snap those valves shut * *

Later on he testified that: “When I took the little girl away, then I ran back to the truck to shut the valves off on the hose and stop this gas from coming out * * *”

Plaintiffs urge the following three grounds for reversál of the judgment:

1. That the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdicts could only be granted on the pleadings, and no defect there was charged or found.

*541 2. That the facts established circumstances under which the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur was applicable and the burden was upon the defendant to show absence of negligence.

3. That even though res ipsa loquitur was not applicable, there was sufficient evidence of negligence which was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ damage to take the case to the jury.

Defendant urges that no final judgment was entered and several other points allegedly sustaining the trial court’s action. It is not necessary, however, to consider all the matters urged for affirmance or reversal since we feel that the following are determinative of the issues, to-wit:

First Question To Be Determined.

Was there a final judgment entered?

The question is answered in the affirmative. Defendant claims that the judgment entered below was not final. The pertinent part of the judgment entered by tli© trial judge read!

“DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR JUDGMENT FOR DEFENDANT NOTWITHSTANDING VERDICTS OF JURY GRANTED. JUDGMENT ENTERED ON THE VERDICTS OF THE JURY VACATED. JUDGMENT TO ENTER IN FAVOR OF THE DEFENDANT.” (Underscoring added.)

The clerk of the trial court thereafter entered the judgment on a form of “Entry of Judgment.” This was in usual form except that no costs were granted.

We note that this judgment was entered after the following matters had occurred:

1. Denial of defendant’s Motion to Dismiss made at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence.

2. Denial of defendant’s Motion for a Directed Verdict made at the conclusion of the trial.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
298 P.2d 950, 133 Colo. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grange-mutual-fire-insurance-co-v-golden-gas-co-colo-1956.