J. C. Carlile Corp. v. Farmers Liquid Fertilizer, Inc.

346 F.2d 91
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1965
DocketNos. 17768, 17771
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 346 F.2d 91 (J. C. Carlile Corp. v. Farmers Liquid Fertilizer, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. C. Carlile Corp. v. Farmers Liquid Fertilizer, Inc., 346 F.2d 91 (8th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

MEHAFFY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a judgment in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas aw.axfiibg plaintiff-appellee, Farmers Liquid Fertilizer, Inc., $56,700.-00 for breach of a construction contract. Under the terms of the contract, defendants-appellants, J. C. Carlile Corporation as contractor and The Travelers Indemnity Company as surety, had agreed to build Farmers a dry blend, commercial, fertilizer plant on Farmers’ property in Patterson, Arkansas.

The issues below, sounding in contract and tort, were submitted to the jury in the form of special interrogatories.1 In summary, the jury found that while the [93]*93fertilizer plant which was destroyed by fire on February 19, 1963 did not burn as the result of negligence of either Farmers or Carlile, the risk of loss fell upon the contractor and its surety because construction of the plant had not been substantially completed and “accepted” within the intendment of the contract at the time of the fire.

The appellants seek a reversal based on the contentions that the District Court erred (1) in overruling their motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict because there was no evidence supporting the jury’s finding that appellee had not accepted the plant prior to the fire; (2) by refusing to instruct the jury that the insurance provisions of the contract placed the risk of loss on appellee ;2 and (3) by giving the jury a binding instruction on negligence which lacked evidentiary basis and conflicted with other of its instructions on fault.

This action was properly removed from state to federal court based on diversity jurisdiction. Since the construction contract was executed and performed in Arkansas where the loss also occurred, the substantive law of that jurisdiction applies.

We need not reach the first two assignments of error since this case must be reversed for the giving of an erroneous instruction. The District Court upon appellee’s request gave the following instruction designated by the parties as No. 3:

Instruction No. 3. “You are instructed that if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff, Farmers, reasonably relied on the defendant’s advice or design as to the construction and adequacy of the loft or deck above the office for the storage of fertilizer sacks of a quantity placed on that deck by the plaintiff and that Farmers did not know or have reason to believe that the weight might cause the structure to collapse, then the plaintiff, Farmers, would not be guilty of negligence and you should answer Interrogatory No. 8 in the negative.” 3

Appellants timely and specifically objected to the giving of Instruction No. 3, but this objection was overruled by the court.

Instruction No. 3 bound the jury to answer Interrogatory No. 8 in the negative (finding appellee not guilty of negligence) merely upon a finding that appellee was not negligent if it reasonably relied upon appellants’ advice or design as to the construction of the deck and did not know or have reason to be[94]*94lieve the weight might cause the structure to collapse.

This instruction completely ignored appellants’ theory that appellee was negligent in the actual construction of the storage deck. The error of omission is obvious for the reason that appellee could reasonably have relied on appellants’ design and still have performed the construction in a careless or negligent manner. Therefore, the jury should not have been bound to find appellee free of negligence without consideration of this material issue.

This instruction was not only incomplete but also irreconcilably conflicted with Instruction No. 5 given by the court:

Instruction No. 5. “If you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the employees of Farmers did not exercise ordinary care in constructing the office partitions and deck for the purpose for which it was intended, and that such failure to exercise ordinary care, if any, was a proximate cause of the fire, then you should find in the appropriate interrogatory submitted to you that Farmers was negligent.”

The Arkansas Supreme Court has held in an unbroken line of cases, commencing before the turn of the century, that an instruction which ignores a material issue in a case about which the evidence is conflicting and allows the jury to find a verdict without considering that issue, is misleading and prejudicial even though another instruction which correctly presents that issue is contained in other parts of the charge. This was so stated in the leading case of St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. v. Rogers, 93 Ark. 564, 126 S.W. 375, 378-379 (1910), wherein the Arkansas court also ruled:

“Where the instructions are thus conflicting, it is impossible for an appellate court to tell which of them the jury followed, and such an error calls for a reversal. Separate and disconnected instructions, each complete in itself and irreconcilable with each other, cannot be read together so as to modify each other and present a harmonious whole. Selden v. State, 55 Ark. 393, 18 S.W. 459; Goodell v. Bluff City Lbr. Co., 57 Ark. 203, 21 S.W. 104; Rector v. Robins, 74 Ark. 437, 86 S.W. 667; Fletcher v. Eagle, 74 Ark. 585, 86 S.W. 810, 109 Am.St.Rep. 100; St. L. & N. A. R. R. Co. v. Midkiff, 75 Ark. 263, 87 S.W. 446; Grayson-Mc-Leod Lumber Co. v. Carter, 76 Ark. 69, 88 S.W. 597; St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Hitt, 76 Ark. 224, 88 S.W. 911; Bayles v. Daugherty, 77 Ark. 201, 91 S.W. 304; White River L. & W. Ry. Co. v. Star, R. & L. Co., 77 Ark. 128, 91 S.W. 14; Merchants’ Fire Ins. Co. v. McAdams, 88 Ark. 550, 115 S.W. 175; Jones v. State, 89 Ark. 213, 116 S.W. 230; So. Anthracite Coal Co. v. Bowen [93 Ark. 140], 124 S.W. 1048.”

Accord: W. C. Nabors Co. v. Ball Chevrolet Co., 201 Ark. 486, 145 S.W.2d 25 (1940); Mo. Pac. Transportation Co. v. Howard, 201 Ark. 6, 143 S.W.2d 538 (1940); Herring v. Bollinger, 181 Ark. 925, 29 S.W.2d 676 (1930).

Instructions Numbers 3 and 5 are inconsistent, cannot be read together so as to modify each other, and, therefore, do not present a harmonious whole. They could only serve to mislead and confuse the jury. In Temple Cotton Oil Co. v. Skinner, 176 Ark. 17, 2 S.W.2d 676, 679 (1928), the Arkansas court stated:

“We all agree that an instruction should be complete in itself when it undertakes to tell the jury when a verdict should be returned for the plaintiff and that the trial court should not instruct the jury that it must find for the plaintiff or the defendant as the case might be upon a partial or incomplete statement of the law applicable to the material facts of the case. We also agree that where the body of the instruction does not contain every material fact proper to be established, what is called in Winter v. Bandel, 30 Ark. 362, page 376, the stereotyped ‘find [95]*95for the plaintiff’ had better be left off.”

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