J. M. Griffin & Sons, Inc. v. Newton Butane Gas & Oil Co.

50 So. 2d 370, 210 Miss. 797, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 314
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1951
DocketNo. 37744
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 So. 2d 370 (J. M. Griffin & Sons, Inc. v. Newton Butane Gas & Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. M. Griffin & Sons, Inc. v. Newton Butane Gas & Oil Co., 50 So. 2d 370, 210 Miss. 797, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 314 (Mich. 1951).

Opinion

Alexander, J.

Appellant is in the sawmill business. It desired to have a butane gas tank near its mill moved to a new location. To this end it sought the services of the butane company but was by it informed that it did not have suitable facilities but that it would engage the appellee, the Newton Motor Company, to move it with,a wrecker truck. The latter company agreed to undertake the job provided a representative of the hutane company went along. Tinder direction of the latter, a chain was at[803]*803tached to a lifting lug on one end of the tank and hoisting operations begun. The effect of this procedure was that the tank was dragged across one of two heavy transverse beams upon which it was cradled, a protruding valve was sheared from its position near its lowest point, and a large quantity of butane gas spewed out, which, being wafted toward the mill, caught fire, totally destroying it. For such damage suit was brought against the butane company and the motor company. From a verdict and judgment for the appellees, the sawmill company appeals.

In recognition of the presumption supporting the correctness of the judgment, we state the following factual background favorably to appellees although there is frequent substantial conflict.

The tank was owned and had been supplied by the butane company. It had filled it to about four-fifths capacity a short while before the fire. At the time it contained about two hundred gallons of fuel and the gauge registered seventy per cent full. This gauge was on top of the tank and visible with slight effort.

A representative of appellant had assured the butane company that the tank was empty. Such information was, in the presence and hearing of an officer of appellant, later conveyed by telephone to the motor company. As stated, this latter company was unwilling to undertake the task unless an experienced butane man accompanied its driver and such condition was met.

The foreman of appellant knew that the tank was not empty and upon observing the appellees in the act of moving the tank, made as if to go to the scene but a mishap in the mill deflected his purpose. Although the contention is made that the foreman had intended to warn them of the presence of gas, his expressed purpose was to suggest that another tank, concededly empty, be first dragged out of the way.

In view of the conclusions we have reached, we find it unnecessary to go further into the testimony.

[804]*804The question for decision is succinctly, and we think correctly, stated to be whether the appellees were entitled implicitly to rely upon the representation that the tank was empty. Otherwise put, must a defendant who is in the business of selling and distributing butane gas, cultivate an habitual and prudent skepticism of any assurances other than those of his own sense and senses'? The negative of such view is presented by several instructions granted on behalf of the appellees. At this point we summarize them as authorizing a verdict for the defendants if the jury believed from the evidence that the sawmill company told the defendants that the tank was empty. This means, of course, that the defendants had a legal right to rely thereon and that they had no' legal duty to verify the facts. Variations upon this theme include the equal right of the motor company to rely absolutely upon such assurance even though the information was relayed to it; the absence under such circumstances of any duty to inspect; and that reliance upon such assurance of safety is an acquittal of negligence.

Certainly, regardless of whether the defendants are negligent the plaintiff was clearly so, for its servant and foreman knew the tank contained gas and was aware of the exposure of the defendants and of itself to such danger, and there was a substantial responsibility upon appellant to assure itself that the tank was empty.

No doubts should impair the reasonable view that an assurance of safety by a plaintiff is always a credit upon the obligation owed by a defendant to. comply with a duty to use reasonable care. To enact by judicial fiat a universal rule that this debt is thereby liquidated would imprison the functions of the jury within an artificial concept since relevant factors would involve the relative capacity of the parties to know or appreciate the danger or to speak with knowledge; the source from which the assurance comes; and the hazards at stake. Wherefore, we restrict our decision to the particular factual situation [805]*805here, presented, wherein stress is laid upon the incident that the assurances were put forward by the plaintiff.

Granting of the following instructions for the defendants is assigned for error: “The court instructs the jury for the defendant, Newton Motor Company, that if the jury believes from a preponderance of the‘evidence that the defendant, Newton Butane Gas and Oil Company, had been told that the tank was empty and was ready to be moved, then this defendant, Newton Motor Company, had an equal right to rely on that information. ’ ’

“The Court instructs the jury for defendant, Newton Butane Gas and Oil Company, that said defendant had the right to rely on any information, if any, given to it by Billie Griffin as to the condition of the tank to be moved, and if you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that Billie Griffin advised Robert Weir at the time he requested the tank be moved, if he so requested, that the tank had been disconnected, was empty, and was ready to be moved, then Newton Butane Gas and Oil Company had the right to rely upon such information and it was not guilty of negligence in so doing.”

Both instructions lay down the principle that the defendants were entitled to rely upon the assurances of safety made by the plaintiff. Appellant contends that the assertion that the tank was empty, disconnected, and ready to be moved, was not sufficient to divest appellees of all responsibility to use reasonable care and that they were, under the circumstances, bound to accept such as-surance with a degree of skepticism which required a verification of the truth of the guaranty.

As stated in Orr v. Columbus & Greenville R. Company, 1950, Miss., 48 So. (2d) 630, 633, “The initial inquiry in every negligence case is not whether the plaintiff was negligent, but whether the defendant was.” Assuming that the appellees were under a duty to use reasonable care, violation of this duty must cause injury to one to whom such duty was owed. Here, of course, a duty would initially be owed to anyone lawfully within [806]*806the area who would be exposed to foreseeable danger. Yet, since a tort is an unlawful violation of a private legal right, it is important to examine whether at the time of the injury appellant had waived such right, or stated conversely, whether appellees had been absolved of their duty.

No legal wrong is done to one who consents. Here, the appellant not only consented that the tank be moved in its then condition but requested that it be done. In no strained sense appellant moved the tank. The defendants, without countervailing knowledge, were under no duty to protect appellant against the consequences of its own imprudence. The rights of appellant were neutralized by its consent, fortified as it was by a warranty of safety, which, emanating from the appellant itself, furnished a measure of assurance which the normal duty to use requisite care would demand. In other words, the appellees were acquitted of responsibility by the assumption of such responsibility by appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
50 So. 2d 370, 210 Miss. 797, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-m-griffin-sons-inc-v-newton-butane-gas-oil-co-miss-1951.