Jankey v. Hope Natural Gas Co.

127 S.E. 199, 98 W. Va. 412, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 59
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1925
DocketNo. 5189.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 127 S.E. 199 (Jankey v. Hope Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jankey v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 127 S.E. 199, 98 W. Va. 412, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 59 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

HatcheR, Judge:

A trial of this ease before the circuit court of Marion county resulted in a verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff for $5,000.00. The court rendered' judgment for the plaintiff and against the defendant, in this amount, and the defendant alleges error.

This is the second time this ease has been here on a writ of ■error. Our opinion on the first trial is reported in 91 W. Va. 308. The facts and circumstances surrounding the injury to plaintiff as proven at the first trial were again proven at the second trial. It is therefore unnecessary to make a re-statement herein of the case. Some new evidence was produced on the second trial, which is as follows: The. *414 day following the accident, engine number 2 wasj repaired. One of the repair men, named Toothman, testified that while repairing this engine, he found a broken piece of valve under, and holding open one of its air check valves. Tooth-man was a. witness at the first trial, but made no mention of the discovery then. There is no evidence directly accounting for this piece of valve, although the explosion burst several valves on a two inch air line which lead to this, as well as the other engines. It was not a part of the valve in which it was lodged.

Proceeding on the assumption that this piece of metal had somehow gotten into and was holding open the valve of engine number 2 just prior to, and at the time of the explosion, quite an array of witnesses accounted for the explosion on the theory that the valve on engine number 2, so held open, permitted the fuel mixture in the engine to be forced back into the air line on each compression stroke, while the engine was being operated by compressed air; and that when the electric current was switched on, the ignition thereby started, extended from the combustion chamber of the engine out through the open valve into the air line, so filled with gas, with the resulting explosion which injured the plaintiff.

Five errors are alleged as grounds for a reversal of the case, which will be considered as numbered by the defendant.

1. The defendant asked the court to give to the jury eight instructions, of which the court gave instructions numbered 3, 6, 7 and 8, but refused instructions numbered 1, 2, 4 and 5. The defendant complains of the rejection by the court of the last numbered instructions.

Defendant’s instructions 1 and 2 are peremptory instructions. A peremptory instruction was also asked by the defendant at the former trial in this ease, in regard to which the court in its opinion, said:

“Number 1 was peremptory, directing the jury to find for the defendant, and under the circumstances shown, we think was properly refused.”

We therefore have an express ruling by this court that the circumstances surrounding this injury, as proven at the *415 first trial, warranted a submission of tbe case to tbe jury. Tbe same circumstances wbicb upon tbe former bearing, tbis court beld were properly submitted to a jury appeared in evidence at tbe second trial of tbis ease. In addition to the circumstances surrounding tbe injury, two theories were offered as to tbe cause of tbe explosion at tbe first trial. Tbe same two theories were in evidence on the second trial. At the last trial, however, another and different theory of tbe cause' of tbe explosion was also presented, as aforesaid, which is referred to in the briefs in tbis case as the third theory. Tbis theory was based on a fact, not proven but merely assumed. It was a theory of experts just as were tbe other two theories. It differed therefrom in detail, but not in general character. For the purposes of this discussion, we see no distinction in law between it and the other two theories. Tbe only fact from wbicb was evolved tbis third theory was a fact determined after, and not before tbe explosion, to-wit: the discovery by Toothman of the piece of valve in the valve of engine number 2. Tbis fragment may as well have been tbe result as the cause of tbe explosion. In fact, one can hardly believe that an explosion so powerful as to burst asunder valves would have left anything in its pathway undisturbed. It is far more reasonable to believe that tbis valve fragment was a piece of one of the bursted valves along the air line, and that it bad been hurled to tbe place where found, than to believe it remained in tbe same place while the terifie force which it bad unleashed spent its fury in the rending of steel and tbe shattering of concrete. If it was proper to submit the case to the jury at the first trial, tbe mere injection of tbis third theory into tbe evidence at tbe second trial can in no wise affect the application of our first holding thereto.

The former decision in this case does not contain a discussion of the reasons prompting the holding that the peremptory instruction therein was improper. The ruling is justified in the opinon by reference only to the circumstances shown, i. e., res ipsa loquitur. The court assumed its reasons were obvious. The decision is just as binding on us as if the reasons for the holding had been given.

*416 ‘ ‘ The decree of the Supreme Court of Appeals upon a question, decided by the court below, is final and irreversible; and upon a second appeal in the cause, the question, decided upon the first appeal, cannot be reviewed.” Henry et al v. Davis, 13 W. Va. 230. See also 4 C. J. par. 3085, p. 1093.

Here was a plant solely under the management of the defendant. It had been operated a number of years. One of the witnesses testified to having worked at this plant more than six years prior to the explosion. This explosion was one which did not. in the ordinary course of things, happen, proper care being used in the management of the plant. There is no evidence whatsoever in the case showing any care on the part of the defendant to employ reasonably safe fellow servants, or showing any inspection of, or rules for the purpose of keeping the plant in a reasonably safe condition, except the sole evidence that it was the custom to thoroughly overhaul its engines once a year, to-wit: during the summer months of each year. There is no evidence that the overhauling of such engines annually wras sufficiently frequent to comply with the rule of reasonable care. The jury had no right to infer, and we have no right to infer, that an annual inspection, adjustment and repair of these engines was reasonable care. Neither do we have the right to infer that reasonably safe- fellow servants were furnished the plaintiff, without some evidence on which to base the inference.

The defendant contends that the mere fact of the explosion is not evidence upon which the jury could base its verdict, citing:

Veith v. Hope Salt Co., 51 W. Va., 96, 41 S. E. 187 (1902); Marshall Window Glass Co. v. Cameron Oil & Gas Co., 59 S. E. 959, 63 W. Va. 202 (S. C. W. Va., 1907); Findley v. Coal & Coke Ry. Co., 78 S. E. 396, 72 W. Va., 268, 1913; Hanley v. Railway Co., 59 W. Va., 419, 1906; Texas & Pacific Ry, Co. v. Barrelt, 166

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.E. 199, 98 W. Va. 412, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jankey-v-hope-natural-gas-co-wva-1925.