Johannsen v. Mid-Continent Petroleum Co.

5 N.W.2d 20, 232 Iowa 805
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 11, 1942
DocketNo. 45833.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 5 N.W.2d 20 (Johannsen v. Mid-Continent Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johannsen v. Mid-Continent Petroleum Co., 5 N.W.2d 20, 232 Iowa 805 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Mitohell, J.

Otto Johannsen was employed by the Denison Auto Company, distributors of Sinclair petroleum products, including gasoline. He operated a truck equipped with a tank, by means of which ’he transported and delivered petroleum products. The Denison Auto Company had a bulk plant on a siding, or industrial track, on the Illinois Central railroad in the town of Denison, Iowa, where it maintained tanks capable of holding large quantities of gasoline and which were filled from tank cars on the'railroad siding. On the 30th *807 day of April 1936, Thomas Lorenzen was in the employ at Denison, Iowa, of the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation of Kentucky, in the operation of its bulk plant from which gasoline and kerosene were dispensed at wholesale. Its bulk station was located north of the Denison Auto Company and there were about 25 feet between the two bulk stations. The Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation station consisted of a vertical tank and two horizontal tanks on stilts, and a small pump house in which was located a gasoline engine and pump which pumped gasoline from tank cars to the bulk-storage tanks. On the 30th day of April 1936, Thomas Lorenzen, the employee of the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation, in the operation of the bulk plant was pumping gasoline from a tank ear to one of the horizontal storage tanks. He left the station with the gasoline engine and pump operating to go downtown. While he was absent, Otto Johannsen went to the bulk plant of his employer, the Denison Auto Company, and noticed when he arrived there that gasoline was overflowing from the Mid-Continent tank, that the wind was blowing the gasoline around, and gasoline was running on the ground. He ran over to the Mid-Continent bulk station and turned off the gasoline engine. Before he escaped from the premises the whole thing became a mass of flames, and in running through the flames to escape to a place of safety he was severely burned.

He commenced this action at law to recover damages against the Mid-Continent ‘ Petroleum Corporation of Delaware and Thomas Lorenzen, alleging that through the negligence of Thomas Lorenzen, who was an employee of the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation, and through no fault of his own, he was injured. Evidence was offered, and at the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendants made a motion for a directed verdict, which was renewed at the close of all of the evidence. The lower court overruled the motion and submitted the case to the jury, which returned a verdict in the amount of $5,731. The defendants have appealed to this court.

The appellants argue that the lower court erred in overruling the following ground of the motion for a directed verdict, to wit:

*808 “That there is no evidence in the record showing any negligence on the part of any of the defendants which was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury.”

And as a separate ground also allege that the lower court erred in overruling the following ground of the motion for a directed verdict:

“That under the record the plaintiff claims that he went on the property of the defendant, Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation of Kentucky for the purpose of protecting their property from a claimed peril of the said property. He was therefore a mere trespasser and this defendant is not liable to him for any act except such act as might be wanton, and the record is devoid of any testimony showing that there were any wanton acts of this defendant after he went upon this property. ’ ’

We believe that both of these grounds can be discussed at the same time. The question of proximate cause has always been a troublesome one, the trouble arising not so much from the reason that it is difficult to formulate a rule as from the difficulty in the application of the rule to a particular case. There is no dispute in this record in regard to what happened at the bulk station of the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation. Its agent put in operation a pump driven by a gasoline engine to pump gasoline from a railroad tank car tO' its storage tank. He testified that he measured the amount of gasoline that was in the tank into which he was pumping the gasoline before he left the bulk station to go uptown on some business, and he figured out from a chart that there were so many gallops in the tank and that it would take so long to pump sufficient to fill it from the railroad car. He admits that he must have got the wrong figures on the chart. That the tank overflowed and the gasoline spread over the premises, including the pump house and in the air, through the negligence of the appellants, is not questioned. Gasoline was spraying and scattering about the neighborhood and on the pump house where the gasoline engine was operating. The record shows that the exhaust pipe of this gasoline engine that operated the pump extended through the wall of the pump house. It was at this time that Otto Johannsen, the appellee, *809 arrived at the bulk station of bis employer, which was within 25 feet of the appellants’ bulk station. He recognized the danger, sought to stop the pump, and before he escaped from the premises the fire broke out and he was burned. The question is: Is there evidence from which a jury could find that the negligence of the appellants was the proximate cause of the appellee’s injury! If the gasoline had not been permitted to overflow from this tank and to spray upon the ground and the adjoining buildings there would have been no damage caused. Just what caused the fire is not definitely set out in the record. But the record does show that the gasoline engine was operating, that there was heat in the engine and in the exhaust pipe; and, of course, when gasoline comes in contact with heat, the heat ignites the gasoline and produces fire. In other words, the negligence of the appellants in having sprayed gasoline and a gasoline engine producing fire in close proximity on the premises caused the fire which injured the appellee. There was no other cause here. In their brief and argument the appellants say:

“It is submitted that the natural desire arising in the mind of any normal person to save the property of another which might be in danger, probably prompted the appellee to do something to stop the overflow of the gasoline, but it is submitted with all the earnestness at our command that what was done, was done in an extraordinarily negligent manner. Accordingly, measured by any of the yardsticks set forth in the definition of proximate cause contained in the Restatement of the Law of Torts above set forth [Restatement of the Law of Torts, Negligence, 1196, section 447, subsection (e) ], and approved by this court in Blessing v. Welding, supra, the act of the appellant Lorenzen in allowing the tank to overflow was not the proximate cause of the injury to the appellee.”

But it is interesting to note that the appellants do not set out in what other manner the appellee should have proceeded to stop the flow of oil. It would seem to us that the natural thing to do, especially to a man familiar with the situation, as was the appellee, was to stop the pump, and in order to do this, it was necessary to stop the gasoline engine which was operating • the pump. This was exactly what the appellee did. But the *810

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.W.2d 20, 232 Iowa 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johannsen-v-mid-continent-petroleum-co-iowa-1942.