Herring v. Springbrook Packing Co.

300 P.2d 473, 299 P.2d 604, 208 Or. 191, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 225
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 22, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 300 P.2d 473 (Herring v. Springbrook Packing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herring v. Springbrook Packing Co., 300 P.2d 473, 299 P.2d 604, 208 Or. 191, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 225 (Or. 1956).

Opinions

LUSK, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff, Frederick C. Herring, against the defendant, Springbrook Packing Company Cooperative, a corporation, in an action to recover damages for injury to personal property of the plaintiff. The trial was by jury. Two other defendants, C. & H. Bakery Supply Company and W. Keith Herrmann, were absolved by the jury’s verdict.

The basis of the action was the alleged negligence of the defendants.

Springbrook is the owner and operator of a refrigerated storage warehouse at Springbrook, Oregon, with which the plaintiff had stored a large quantity [193]*193of walnut meats valued at more than $12,000. In the same room of the warehouse were stored a quantity of sliced apples, the property of the defendant, C. & H. Also in this room was a large ammonia freezing unit referred to in the testimony as a diffuser. On the morning of June 20, 1949, the defendant Herrmann, who was an employee of C. & H. and acting in the course of his employment, was engaged in loading a handtruck with barrels of sliced apples which he intended to remove from the warehouse. While so engaged, a barrel which he was attempting to place on the truck hit the edge of the truck bed, as a result of which the truck was set in motion towards and against the diffuser and struck and broke a valve attached to the exterior of the apparatus. Through the opening thus made liquid ammonia under pressure escaped and vaporized and filled the room. The noxious fumes penetrated the boxes containing the plaintiff’s walnut meats, discolored them and materially reduced their value. The jury assessed plaintiff’s damages at $8455.63, the exact amount sued for.

Omitting allegations withdrawn by the court, the charges of negligence in the second amended complaint, on which the case was tried, were as follows:

Against the defendants C. & H. and Herrmann: (1) Pushing and operating a loaded handtruck into and against the ammonia freezing unit; (2) pushing and operating said loaded handtruck without keeping a proper lookout to avoid colliding with said freezing unit.

Against the defendant Springbrook: (1) Failure to install guards, rails or other obstacles in order to protect said freezing unit from injury by handtrucks or otherwise, notwithstanding the defendant Spring[194]*194broolc well knew that defendant Herrmann and other employees of defendant C. & H. pushed and operated loaded handtrucks around and near the unit; (2) failure to provide adequate or any devices or equipment to exhaust and remove said ammonia gas after its escape from said freezing unit.

When the plaintiff rested his case defendant Springbrook moved for judgment of involuntary non-suit. The court denied the motion, and the ruling is assigned as error. Consideration of the question requires a detailed statement of the evidence.

The following description of the premises taken from Springbrook’s brief has been expressly approved in plaintiff’s brief as “generally correct” and is adopted for the purposes of this opinion:

“ Springbrook’s warehouse included three cold storage rooms—north, center and south. The center room was about 50 feet by 90 feet, the latter being the length of the walls separating the rooms. The center room had two doors, each in about the center of the 90 foot walls, opening directly to the north and south room, respectively.
‘ ‘ The desired temperatures are achieved by five ammonia refrigeration machines, of which two are situated in the north room, two in the south room, and one in the center room. They stand about 1Ó feet high, and are mutually connected by pipes, and are dependent upon the same compressor and certain other machinery. The floors of the room are concrete. Each of the refrigeration machines is set in a depression three inches below the level of the floor. Part of that machine consists of an oil leg which accumulates excess oil. To drain that oil there is a valve extending from the oil leg. No part of any machine extends beyond the depression. The valve from the oil leg is the thing that was broken when the handtruck hit it. However, it was four and one-half inches from and [195]*195within the end of the depression, and about twenty-six inches from each side of and within the depression. The valve consisted of half-inch extra heavy pipe.”

In addition to the foregoing plaintiff calls attention to the facts, as disclosed by the evidence, that the pit in which the machine stood was surrounded by a section of the concrete floor four inches in width, which sloped towards the machine at the rate of one-half inch in four inches, and that the floor drain for the room was in the pit.

Under their arrangement with Springbrook both the plaintiff and C. & H., and its employee Herrmann, had access to the storage room for the purpose of moving their foodstuffs in and out of the room, and in carrying out that work they used handtrucks made available to them by Springbrook. For about six months it had been the daily practice of Herrmann to remove apples from the storage room and transport them to Portland for delivery to customers of the firm. The apples were contained in barrels and tubs of varying weights, and occupied more than half the space in the room, which was generally kept fairly full of goods. But there was always an aisle running straight through the center of the room, and every day Herrmann passed right by the ammonia freezing machine. The accident occurred shortly after eight o’clock in the morning of June 20, 1949. There was no one in the room except the defendant Herrmann. He was loading barrels of apples on a truck which he described as “a low bed cart that was probably approximately 3 feet wide, and 5 or 6 feet long. It had one steel U-handle on the front of the cart and two small swivel wheels, and there were two stationary wheels located at the rear of the cart.” The truck weighed approximately 100 [196]*196pounds, and was selected by Herrmann as the one best suited to his purpose. He had placed one or two barrels of apples, each weighing 150 pounds, on the rear part of the truck, and was attempting to load a barrel weighing 100 pounds when the accident occurred. He described the accident in this language:

“It’s been so long ago that the exact details are rather hazy, but as my memory of it now, I lifted the barrel to put it on the wagon, on the fore part of the wagon, and as I started to put it on the wagon the barrel hit the edge of the wagon and it swivelled around and turned about halfway under the momentum, and the handle—the steel handle on the front of the cart apparently struck the valve that has been previously mentioned.”

Herrmann testified that the rear of the truck was two to four feet from the diffuser and the front was further away; that the truck, pivoting on its fixed wheels, traveled five or six feet in “more or less of a half turn”, and the right front wheel—one of the swivel wheels-—went into the depression surrounding the diffuser.

When the handle of the truck struck the valve “a cloud of vapor came from the pipe with a hissing noise, and I looked at it and as best as I could see it because the truck was against it and not knowing anything about refrigeration, I immediately ran out of the room, shut the door, and went to find Mr. Butler, the plant engineer. ’ ’

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ramos Ramos v. Commonwealth
99 P.R. 640 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1971)
Ramos Ramos v. Estado Libre Asociado
99 P.R. Dec. 659 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1971)
Brown v. Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway Co.
431 P.2d 817 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1967)
Dewey v. A. F. Klaveness & Co.
379 P.2d 560 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1963)
Raz v. Mills
372 P.2d 955 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1962)
Danner v. ARNSBERG
362 P.2d 758 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1961)
Eitel v. Times, Inc.
352 P.2d 485 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1960)
Oregon Mutual Fire Insurance v. Mayer
316 P.2d 805 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1957)
Herring v. Springbrook Packing Co.
300 P.2d 473 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 P.2d 473, 299 P.2d 604, 208 Or. 191, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-springbrook-packing-co-or-1956.