Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. v. De Lape

109 F.2d 598, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3959
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 1940
Docket9224
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 109 F.2d 598 (Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. v. De Lape) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. v. De Lape, 109 F.2d 598, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3959 (9th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Circuit Judge.

Appellee David E. De Lape, plaintiff, recovered judgment in tort against appellant Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company, a corporation, defendant. This appeal is from that judgment.

The case was begun in the California Superior Court and was removed to the United States District Court because of diversity of citizenship of the parties, and was tried to the court without the aid of a jury upon stipulation of the parties. The cause was tried and submitted for decision upon a stipulation of fact, written statements and depositions. The amended complaint alleges that the appellant was in the business of manufacturing cigarettes and that it did manufacture a certain cigarette in such a negligent, careless and unskillful manner as to cause it to explode when lighted, causing injury and damage to ap-pellee. It was alleged that the exploding ■cigarette was negligently, carelessly and unskillfully put up, packed and sold in a sealed package and was carelessly placed or suffered to be placed in market for sale. Appellant generally and specifically denied the allegations by its answer, and affirmatively therein alleged that in the manufacture of all of its cigarettes it used the most modern and approved methods and utilized all known tests and precautions to prevent the introduction of foreign or deleterious matter into them. It is also alleged by way of an affirmative defense that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence by permitting the cigarette he tried to smoke to come into contact with certain explosive gases and substances and that thereafter he lit and smoked it in close proximity to explosive gases and substances, proximately causing the alleged explosion and any consequential personal injuries which may have been sustained by appellee therefrom.

The court found that appellant “negligently, carelessly, and unskillfully, manufactured, put up, packed and sold, * * * a certain cigarette which was carelessly placed, or suffered to be placed upon the market for sale to the general public in the State of California”, and that certain injuries which it found to have resulted from the explosion were due to appellant’s carelessness and negligence.

For a clear understanding of the incident, we quote from appellee’s deposition:

“ * * * Stone [a companion] opened a new package of [appellant’s brand of cigarettes] * * * and * * * handed the package to me, and I took one out, and Mr. Stone lit a match, and when he held it to the cigarette I drew on it, and I saw some sparks, tiny sparks come out, but I didn’t mind that because I had seen that happen in cigars and pipes. So I drew on it again, and the fire went in my mouth, on my lip and tongue. And I took it out as quick as I could, and I had it * * * just out of my mouth, just clearing my moustache, as near as I could remember. And then there was quite a lot of fire came out of the cigarette, and to me it seemed — I don’t know, maybe in my fright I inhaled — I was frightened of course — and ‘it burned my nose, this side of my nose, and burned this half of the moustache nearly off, and scorched the face a little. * * * Yes, and a little on the other side of the nose, just a little. My wife screamed, ‘Put it out’. I put my hand on my moustache which was burning and put it out, * * *. ”

Later, appellee testified that the flame looked to be three inches or more in diameter and that, “There was no noise except like a firecracker that didn’t detonate, what the children call a ‘whizzer’. * * * The tobacco seemed more or less' charred all the way through the cigarette, from the lighted end to the mouth end.”

Appellee also testified that after the explosion he examined the cigarette under a microscope and discovered this charring and the paper burned in small spots from inside out.

There was no testimony of any kind rebutting the details of the incident as related by appellee and by Edward Leo Duffy who witnessed it, and who gave testimony substantially the same as appellee’s. We take it, as did the trial court and as do both parties in their briefs, that the quoted testimony substantially covers the incident.

The interim between the manufacture of the cigarette and its attempted use by ap-pellee is covered by a statement appearing in appellant’s opening brief, which is entirely consistent with the evidence: “Stone had theretofore purchased a carton of cigarettes manufactured by appellant and during the conversation produced a new, unopened package of cigarettes which had formed part of the carton. After opening the new package Stone took a cigarette out of it and handed the package to the appellee who also took from it a cigarette *600 and placed the same in his mouth. Stone thereupon struck a match, lit his own cigarette and then applied the lighted match to appellee’s cigarette.”

It was stipulated at the trial that Dr. Paul M. Gross, Professor of Chemistry, would, if called, testify that the process used in the manufacture of appellant’s cigarettes was uniform in all of its factories and branches where its cigarettes were made; and that such process was the one in use prior to the accident and is now (Nov. 2nd, 1938) the one in use.

Dr. Gross in his deposition, after testifying to his qualifications as a chemist and as to his position as Professor of Chemistry at Duke University, testified that he was familiar with the manufacture of appellant’s cigarettes and with the general nature and character of the ingredients and the general process of their manufacture. He then testified in detail as to the process used and that the care taken at all times to protect the purity of the cigarettes manufactured and to prevent any foreign substances from getting into them was the best that was in general use in the manufacture of cigarettes.

Mr. Edward Tipton’s statement introduced into evidence by stipulation recited the particular methods used and inspections made in the California factory. No claim is made that there was any negligence in the process generally followed in the appellant’s factories.

Appellant’s claim that the explosion was nothing more than the flaring of the match upon the face of appellee as the cigarette was lighted by his companion cannot be sustained, since the recital of the incident by appellee and his companion is inconsistent with such theory and remains un-rebutted and was accepted as the truth by the trial court. There was no evidence in the case supporting the allegation that the cigarette was exposed by appellee to explosive gases before or at the time of lighting it, save alone the match incident. The evidence appeals to us as it did to the trial court that the carton and package in which the exploding cigarette reached appellee were as they had left the factory, and no attempt to claim otherwise appears in appellant’s brief. The evidence is all one way that the cigarette reached the smoker in the same condition that it had left the factory. As it left the factory, then, it contained a foreign substance which broke into flame as the match was applied, and certain injuries resulted. Appellant answers in effect, that even if this be true, still it is not liable because negligence has not been proved. Appellee admits that the judgment cannot be sustained in the absence of negligence, but relies upon the doctrine of “res ipsa loquitur” to establish that essential. If this doctrine is applicable negligence has been established.

In Michener v. Hutton et al., 203 Cal. 604, 265 P. 238, 59 A.L.R.

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Bluebook (online)
109 F.2d 598, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liggett-myers-tobacco-co-v-de-lape-ca9-1940.