Margay Oil Corp. v. Jamison

59 P.2d 790, 177 Okla. 433, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 940
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 16, 1936
DocketNo. 25626.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 790 (Margay Oil Corp. v. Jamison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margay Oil Corp. v. Jamison, 59 P.2d 790, 177 Okla. 433, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 940 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

OSBOItN, V. C. J.

This action was instituted in the district court of Tulsa county by Alexander Jamison, as administrator of the estate of Wesley Nathan Butterfield, deceased, against the Margay Oil Corporation, wherein it was sought to recover damages for certain injuries sustained by the said Butterfield which resulted in his death. The cause was tried to a jury and a verdict rendered in favor of plaintiff for $12,500. Prom a judgment thereon defendant has appealed. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

It is alleged by plaintiff that defendant is a corporation engaged in the business of producing oil and gas and manufacturing gasoline and easing-head gas from crude oil; that it owned and operated leases and properties in Creek county, Okla.; that on February 7, 1932, Butterfield, the deceased, was employed by defendant as a roustabout and pumper on said leases; that defendant owned and operated a treating plant or certain apparatus used for the purpose of improving the oil by removing salt water and other substances therefrom; that this plant was installed in a small building 11 by 12 feet and approximately 14 feet in height; that the apparatus consisted of a boiler, with flues running out through the top of the building, which was used to heat the oil; that gas was piped from the lease into the boiler-house and was used for heating purposes. It was further alleged that at times the supply of gas would become inadequate and the fire in the boiler would become extinguished and thereafter the pressure would come on and gas would escape into the room without any fire to consume the same; that there was no automatic cut-off or valve to stop the flow of gas after the fire became extinguished and the only way in which the gas could be cut off would be for some person to turn the cut-off valve. Plaintiff further alleges that on the morning of February 7, 1932, the deceased, as a part of his regular duties, wont to the boiler room and found that the fire was extinguished and that ho thereupon closed the. valve which let gas into the firebox and left the treating room and remained away for a reasonable time and returned thereto; that when he reached a place approximately even with the west side of the boiler an unexpected and violent explosion occurred and that he thereby became so badly burned and injured that he died on February 9, 1932. The general allegations of negligence are that defendant failed to furnish deceased a safe place in which to work and failed and refused to furnish the deceased safe in-strumentalities and equipment with which to work; that the defendant was negligent in failing to keep an employee on duty at all times at the treating plant to regulate the flow of gas so that the treating house and boiler would not be filled with the unconsumed gas and gas fumes.

Defendant pleads contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and that the injuries received by decedent were the result of an accident unavoidable by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of defendant.

Among other assignments of error, defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. We will briefly review the evidence.

One Olin Black testified in behalf of plaintiff that on the date of the injury of deceased, he, the witness, was employed by the defendant as a farm boss on the Hattie Vaughn lease located about a mile east and a mile south of Bristow; that it was the duty of witness to give orders to the deceased. The witness described the treating plant and testified that two kinds of gas were used as fuel therein, raw gas and residue gas. He further testified that no one stayed on duty during the night to see that *435 the fire was kept burning; that on the morning of February 7, 1932, the deceased went to the treating room about 6:20 o’clock; that witness was about 200 yards away from the plant at that time; that he looked in the direction of the treating plant and saw fire; that some of the fire was still and some of it was moving; that the moving fire appeared as if it were being carried by some person; that witness started running toward the plant and met deceased; that deceased said: “I am burned”, and the witness replied: “You certainly are burned bad, Wes.”; that witness asked deceased how it happened and deceased said that he went to the door of the house and saw that the fire was out under the boiler; that he then went in and closed the gate valve to cut off the gas and waited about five minutes, and while standing outside lighted a match and held it in and around the door and nothing happened, and that the deceased went into the room and when he got about even with the boiler on the west side thereof there was an explosion; when witness met deceased, deceased had been in the creek; that witness found the deceased’s overalls and a part of his shirt in the creek; that when witness met deceased his clothing was burned across the hips, and his shirt and underclothes were pretty well burned off from his hips upward. The witness further testified that deceased was wearing canvas gloves and there were no burns on deceased’s hands and the gloves were not burned; that deceased was not burned much below the belt.

One J. W. Strickland was called as a witness for plaintiff and testified that he was 58 years old and had been in the oil business practically all of his working years; that he had drilled a great number of oil wells and had some experience with treating plants similar to the one involved herein. By reason of his long experience the witness was allowed to testify regarding the propensities of gas; he testified that gas' would settle in low and close places when air was damp; that he had examined the treating plant and was of the opinion that under the right atmospheric conditions gas would come out of the boiler and settle in the house; that if a man went into the house, turned the gas off, went out and stayed for five minutes, then struck a match and nothing happened and then walked in, it was possible for an explosion then to have occurred.

A number of witnesses were introduced by defendant to prove that certain experiments had been conducted at the plant by which it was ascertained that an explosion would not occur under the conditions related by deceased.

The theory of the defendant by which it seeks to support its contentions that deceased was guilty of contributory negligence is that deceased was negligent in turning on the gas and that when he kneeled down in front of the boiler for the purpose of lighting the gas it puffed out and caught his clothes, which W'ere saturated with oil. In answer to this argument plaintiff points out that neither the gloves nor the hands of deceased were burned, which evidence does not harmonize with defendant’s theory.

Plaintiff’s theory is that during the night prior to the date of the injury to deceased, the gas pressure was lowered to' the extent that the fire went out and thereafter the gas pressure was gradually increased, the gas escaped from the boiler and that a pocket of gas collected or stratified in the building, and on account of the atmospheric pressure at the time of the injury the pocket of gas so collected did not escape from the building although the door remained open for several minutes, and that when deceased re-entered the room said pocket of gas exploded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 790, 177 Okla. 433, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margay-oil-corp-v-jamison-okla-1936.