Mabe v. Huntington Coca-Cola Bottling Company

116 S.E.2d 874, 145 W. Va. 712, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 68
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1960
Docket12015
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 S.E.2d 874 (Mabe v. Huntington Coca-Cola Bottling Company) 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
Mabe v. Huntington Coca-Cola Bottling Company, 116 S.E.2d 874, 145 W. Va. 712, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 68 (W. Va. 1960).

Opinion

Beery, Judge :

This action of trespass on the case was instituted in the Circuit Court of Cabell County, West Virginia, by the plaintiff, Kyle Mahe, against the defendant, Huntington Coca-Cola Bottling Company, a Corporation, to recover damages for injuries allegedly received by the plaintiff when the lid of a premix Coca-Cola tank blew off while the tank was under pressure. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $2500.00. A motion on behalf of the defendant to set aside the verdict was overruled by the trial court and judgment entered on the verdict. A writ of error and supersedeas to this judgment was granted by this Court on February 8, 1960.

The plaintiff is the owner of a drive-in restaurant in Huntington, West Virginia. On February 28, 1957, he purchased from the defendant a premix Coca-Cola dispensing system which is composed of one or more 5 gallon stainless steel drums called premix tanks, a *714 cylinder of carbon dioxide gas to furnish pressure, and a cooling coil and spigot. Coca-Cola is placed in the premix tanks at the bottling plant under pressure of 60 pounds per square inch. On the top of each premix tank there is a lid in the neck thereof which rests against a rubber gasket known as an “O ring” and over the lid and gasket a retaining ring is placed to act as a collar. There are also two small valve openings on the top of the tank for the attachment of hoses to the tank. Each of the valve openings has an automatic sealing device which operates when a hose is disconnected. The system is set up by attaching a cylinder of carbon dioxide gas by means of a hose to one of the valve openings in the top of a premix tank. A hose is connected from the other valve opening to another premix tank or to the dispensing spigot if only one premix tank is used, the tanks being connected in series if more than one is used, so that the pressure from the gas cylinder forces the Coca-Cola from the tank through the hoses to the tank farthest away from the pressure cylinder. The last tank is then connected to a cooling coil and spigot through which the Coca-Cola beverage passes and is cooled and dispensed.

When the retaining ring of the premix tank is closed a post welded to the ring is adjacent to a post attached to the rim of the tank in such a manner that a wire is run through holes in the two posts and a lead seal attached. The purpose of this wire and lead seal is to assure the bottling company that the lid from the tank has not been removed by the retailer and another product added to or substituted in the tank. This sealing device serves the same function as a seal on a railroad boxcar, and has nothing to do with the effectiveness of the closure of the tank.

The plaintiff testified that on March 17,1957, he disconnected an empty premix tank from the premix system at his restaurant, walked thirty-seven feet carrying the tank, set it down on the floor and that at that time the top of the tank blew off, striking him in the face and injuring him. After the accident the plaintiff *715 was removed to the St. Mary’s Hospital in Huntington where it was fonnd that he was suffering from lacerations of the face, a severe laceration of the lip, compound fracture of the nose and foreign bodies in and around the left eye, which were removed from the eye. It was necessary that the plaintiff remain in the hospital for several days, although he suffered from the injuries for about three weeks.

At the time this premix system was purchased from the defendant it was installed in plaintiff’s restaurant in the presence of the plaintiff, and all of the equipment remained in his possession and under his control during the time it remained in his restaurant. The plaintiff was the only witness to the actual accident. He says that he removed one of the exhausted tanks, carried it through the kitchen to the wareroom and when he set it down the lid blew off, striking him in the face. Two waitresses and a boy who did odd jobs for the plaintiff were present in the restaurant when the accident occurred, but did not witness the actual happening of the accident. They testified that they found the plaintiff lying on the floor, bleeding profusely, and the boy took him to the hospital in his automobile for emergency treatment.

The plaintiff and his witnesses deny that the plaintiff did anything but remove the tank, carry it back and set it down. However, the defendant introduced witnesses to contradict or impeach plaintiff’s witnesses to the effect that one of the plaintiff’s witnesses had told them the plaintiff was hammering on the top of the can, in an effort to get the top off, when it blew up. Plaintiff’s witness stated that the tank had no wire seal on it and other than that, there was no testimony by plaintiff’s witnesses that there was anything wrong with the tank prior to the accident.

The defendant’s evidence with regard to the tank was that the top of the tank was properly locked and sealed at the time it was delivered and that the only way these tops would blow off was when an attempt was made to force it off.

*716 The evidence of the engineers who testified on behalf of the defendant is undisputed that if the lid and gasket were placed in the neck ring on top of the tank, the retaining ring then pnt on and rotated until it was in a locked position, the wire seal installed, and the pressure of 60 pounds per square inch of gas placed in the tank in the process of filling the tanks, this would cause the lid to move up and expand the rubber gasket so that it remained sealed even if the sealing wire and retaining ring were removed. With regard to the possibility of the lid coming off accidentally, the engineer testified that it required 8.5 foot pounds of torque to break the wire while rotating the ring and 70 pounds to rotate the ring in the level portion of the slot or groove on the tank neck ring and 24.5 pounds to rotate it in the sloping portion of the neck ring. He testified that experiments indicated that if the tank was dropped on a concrete floor while bearing pressure of 5 to 100 pounds with the ring in all positions, the lid would not come off except when there was no pressure at all in the tank. He further testified that a man could only exert 9.3 foot pounds of torque with his hands in turning the ring, and although it might be possible for a man to break the sealing wire, he could not rotate the ring off if there was 60 pounds of pressure in the tank, and that it would take 7.5 foot pounds of energy to rotate the ring with 10 pounds of pressure in the tank. Therefore, the engineer stated that a man would have to use tools to get the ring off under full pressure.

The tank in question was introduced as an exhibit during the trial of the case. It had marks on the top showing that some violent application of force had been made on the top. The defendant’s expert witnesses testified that these marks could not have been made on the top when it was filled because tools were used of equal carbon steel composition to the tank which left no marks thereon and that the visible marks on the can were caused from the application of some tool having a higher carbon content than the low carbon content of stainless steel from which the tank in question was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.E.2d 874, 145 W. Va. 712, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mabe-v-huntington-coca-cola-bottling-company-wva-1960.