Hagy v. Allied Chemical & Dye Corp.

265 P.2d 86, 122 Cal. App. 2d 361, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1490
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1953
DocketCiv. 15094
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 265 P.2d 86 (Hagy v. Allied Chemical & Dye Corp.) 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
Hagy v. Allied Chemical & Dye Corp., 265 P.2d 86, 122 Cal. App. 2d 361, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1490 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

This appeal was taken from a judgment in favor of Katherine Hagy for $25,000, and her husband Russell Hagy for $5,000, after a new trial was denied.

Appellant Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation owns and operates a plant in Richmond, California, wherein it manufactures sulphuric acid. Appellants Compton and Hicken were joined as its employees.

*363 Respondents sued for personal injuries claimed to have been sustained by both of them because of the negligent operation of Allied’s plant on December 21, 1949. Respondents’ theory is that Mrs. Hagy then had a cancer of the larynx, and her husband had a serious heart condition, and because of such negligent operation of the plant a penetrating and irritating “smog” * resulted which seriously aggravated the preexisting condition of each of them.

The plant is situated on Castro Street in the industrial area of Richmond. Neighboring plants are those of California Spray Chemical Corporation, Standard Chemical Corporation, American Radiator and Sanitary Corporation, and Standard Oil Company. The plant is also in the vicinity of the Santa Fe’s railroad yards and the Southern Pacific’s industrial tracks.

The following is lifted bodily from appellants’ statement of the ease:

“Allied produces sulphuric acid from raw sulphur or from hydrogen sulphide gas piped into the Allied plant from the neighboring plant of Standard Oil Company. The process calls for the burning of the sulphur or the hydrogen sulphide into sulphur dioxide. The sulphur dioxide (S02) is then converted into sulphur trioxide (S03) and eventually into sulphuric acid. Sulphur dioxide is a gas and so is sulphur trioxide. Sulphuric acid is of course a liquid. In the course of production, some waste gases are eliminated into the atmosphere through three stacks approximately one hundred feet high.
“On December 21, 1949, the plant had been shut down most of the day for maintenance work. Operations started again at 6 :25 p. m. By 8:25 p. m., it had to be shut down again because of an atmospheric condition known as an inversion. Briefly described, an inversion is a condition in which, *364 instead of being warm near the ground and cold at a higher altitude, the air is cold near the ground and warm at a higher altitude. Since the cold air cannot and does not rise, as warm air would, the impurities which find themselves in the atmosphere are not carried away and a so-called smog results. Moreover, when there is a descending motion in the atmosphere, as there was on the evening of December 21, 1949, the impurities are actually brought down to ground level . . .
“At approximately 8 p. m., Mr. and Mrs. Hagy, who were on their way home after visiting a friend, drove past the Allied plant and through the smog. It made them cough, their eyes started smarting and Mrs. Hagy even fainted. Later in the evening, they went to Herrick Memorial Hospital in Berkeley where they were given oxygen inhalations and then sent home. Both went to work as usual the next day.”
Appellants do not contend that there is insufficient evidence of negligence in the operation of their plant on that evening. At the opening of the discussion they say: “For the purpose of argument, we may assume that Allied should have discovered the inversion and stopped operating sooner than it did and that accordingly it did not act as a reasonably prudent producer of sulphuric acid would have acted under the circumstances.”

This brings us to the situation prevailing between 6:25 and 8:25 p. m. on December 21st, about which there is.no substantial conflict.

When the plant was started up at 6:25 p. m. there were three employees on duty, namely, defendant Hicken, who was the plant chemist and two operators, Wilson and Whitman.

The trouble started about 7 p. m. The fumes passing up through the stacks were heavy, like a moist fog, and were drifting toward town. Wilson testified that the moisture discharged through the stacks was “sulphuric acid in the gas or liquid form, or vapor form” and that it caused him to cough and sneeze, and caused his eyes to burn, smart and run. It got worse—thicker. At one time, he testified, he could not see the full length of the hall within the plant. Between 7:15 and 7:30 he suggested to Hicken that the plant be closed down but Hicken replied “We’ll get straightened around in a little while. ’ ’ When Wilson told Hicken that it was getting pretty bad, and expressed the opinion that they should shut down, Hicken replied that he “had to get the heats up in the converters” to which Wilson responded that if *365 they didn’t shut down “he would probably get heat, but it wouldn’t be in the converters.” The way the stacks were acting was characterized as an “inversion,” already defined, where the fumes normally emitted from the stacks come downward because of atmospheric conditions, instead of going upward.

About 7 p. m. telephone complaints began to come into the plant. Railroad men working in the yards close by wanted to know what was wrong and complained that the smog was bothering their eyes and lungs. After several such calls Hicken told Wilson not to answer the telephone; Wilson obeyed but it continued to ring.

About 7:45 the fumes within the plant were so dense that Hicken and Whitman had to put on their gas masks (which generate their own supply of oxygen). Wilson had no mask and had to go outside to the back of the plant and then to the front repeatedly so as to breathe. The longer the plant operated, the heavier became the smog, and at 8:25 p. m. the plant was shut down as an emergency measure.

A Standard Oil employee working at the Standard plant close by Allied, noticed what appeared to be a fog bank coming in, low, near the ground, which burned his nose and throat, so that he put on a gas mask. Others did likewise.

A Southern Pacific employee working about three-quarters of a mile away was affected by the fumes which he said came from Allied, and which he characterized as “acid fumes.”

Between 8 and 9 p. m. a housewife living several blocks from the plant noticed that her throat burned and her eyes smarted; her husband and daughter had the same sensations. She opened the door, saw the smog, and at once closed it, since her throat and eyes burned. All three persons stayed in the back part of the house until the smog was gone, but all of them continued to cough for three or four days or a week.

A police officer testified that a man residing on Commercial Street, a number of blocks from the Allied plant, reported “a thick fog, accompanied by a strong irritating odor, that smelled like sulphur fumes. This odor caused some of the occupants to become sick at their stomachs.” Several other witnesses testified in a similar vein.

It has been said above that there was no substantial conflict in the evidence respecting the smog conditions in and around the Allied plant at the time in question. In fairness it should be said that appellants claim there was no satisfactory evidence respecting the liquid or moist character of the *366

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Bluebook (online)
265 P.2d 86, 122 Cal. App. 2d 361, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagy-v-allied-chemical-dye-corp-calctapp-1953.