Marsh v. Usk Hardware Co.

132 P. 241, 73 Wash. 543, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1635
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1913
DocketNo. 10109
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 132 P. 241 (Marsh v. Usk Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marsh v. Usk Hardware Co., 132 P. 241, 73 Wash. 543, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1635 (Wash. 1913).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This is. an action to recover damages for personal injuries rendering the plaintiff totally blind, which he alleges resulted to him from a premature explosion of a charge of blasting powder called “jexite,” while-he was load[545]*545ing it into a drill hole in a manner which he was led, by representations made by the defendants, to believe to be safe. A trial before the court and a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for $20,000 in favor of the plaintiff and against all of the defendants, from which they have appealed.

Appellants Charles Greenhalgh, R. Greenhalgh and L. R. Greenhalgh are copartners engaged in mercantile business, including the sale of the blasting powder called jexite, under the firm name of the Usk Hardware Company, at the town of Usk, in Pend Oreille county. Appellant National Powder Company is a domestic corporation with its principal place of business at Spokane, engaged in the manufacture and sale of the blasting powder called jexite. Appellants Jerome Drumheller and Alfred Coolidge are the president and secretary, respectively, of the National Powder Company, and together with J. L. Rice, constitute its board of trustees. Mr. Drumheller, when asked on the witness stand if the company had a general manager, answered, referring to the times here involved, “No, we didn’t; I don’t think we did, not officially.” This is all of the information the record furnishes us on this subject, so the inference is that the business of the company was conducted directly by the trustees.

In the spring or early summer of 1910, the powder company caused to be printed and given out to the public the following circular:

National Powder Company, Inc.
401-402 Columbia Bldg.
Spokane, Wash.
Phone Main 1425. Cable Address “Drumheller.”
Jerome L. Drumheller, President.
Alfred Coolidge, Sec. and Treas.
TO THE TRADE:
In making our initial bow and bid for a fair share of the powder trade, we come with a new and yet old explosive, but in a different and entirely new form. It is acknowledged and known by every [546]*546user of blasting powder that all powders have their faults, and most of them very serious and disagreeable. Some are too weak to accomplish desired results; others have very offensive and dangerous fumes; others are so sensitive to friction and jars that the users’ lives are always in danger, and so it goes down the line.
Now is there an explosive that will accomplish the requirements of man and have no faults nor weak points? Is it possible to make such a powder? We say “yes,” and stand ready to prove every assertion we make.
First — Jexite No. 1 will break more rock than any known explosive pound for pound.
Second — It is absolutely safe to handle in every way.
Third — It cannot be exploded unless confined.
Fourth — It does not freeze and is always ready for use.
Fifth — It is eight to ten times stronger than black powder.
Sixth — It is nearly smokeless and gasless and gives forth no noxious fumes.
“SAFETY AND EFFICIENCY”' covers about all there is to be said. .A powder that is safe and will do the work, and do it well, is about all you want to know.
“JEXITE IS SAFE.” It has been used by hundreds of miners and rock men in Canada for over two years, and in quantity by the hundreds of tons, and not one single life has been taken; not one man injured; not an accident; not a man to find fault. All say “It is the best powder we have ever used.” Not one suit for damage in any way; no contractor need ever fear damage suits. Jexite is safe — Jexite is the strongest powder in. the world today.
We are making powder every day.
Yours truly,
National Powder Co.,
H. D. Farris, 401 Columbia Block.
A. C. Jex,
Inventors and Patentees.

There were about 1,000 copies of this circular then printed, their issuance being begun about that time. Appellant Drumheller, the president, testified that he was absent at the time the circulars were “gotten out by the company.” He does not otherwise disclaim any responsibility for their issuance nor claim to have at any time indicated disapproval thereof. It is clear that he knew of their printing, at least very soon thereafter. Appellant Coolidge did not testify or offer any explanation whatever as to his connection with the issuance of these circulars. Soon after their issuance, [547]*547one of the circulars was seen by respondent in a store at Usk, lying upon the counter, from where he took it home and read it. About September 10, 1910, respondent commenced to dig a well a short distance from the town of Usk, which, after several days’ work thereon, he had sunk to a depth of about 22 feet. He worked in the bottom of the well, which was about five and a half feet in diameter. He had a neighbor assisting him, who hoisted the material out as the excavation proceeded. He had been using dynamite for blasting, to loosen the earth, which was a clay formation and. evidently had some gravel mixed in it. After the well had been sunk to a considerable depth, the fumes following the dynamite explosions caused him to have a “powder headache,” as he termed it, and it then occurred to him to procure some jexite for blasting, which he understood did not create' any noxious fumes, though he had never before used any of it. He was somewhat familiar with the use of dynamite, though by no means an expert in its use, but was apparently unacquainted with the chemical properties of either explosive. He went to the store of the Usk Hardware Company and purchased five pounds of jexite. That firm kept jexite iii stock for sale at retail, having purchased it from the National Powder Company. The conversation between respondent and the member of the firm who waited on him in the making of that sale was testified to by him as follows:

“Q. What conversation, if any, did you have with any of the firm of Greenhalgh Brothers, any of the Greenhalgh members of the Usk Hardware Company, prior to the making of the purchase of this powder? A. I asked them if they handled jexite powder. I had heard of it, read of it; they said they did and while he was doing it up I asked him if it was handled the same as dynamite. He said, No, it wasn’t, and went on and stated that it was a perfectly safe powder and that I could pound it with an iron or. I could pound it on stone or that I could eat it; handle it most any way I wanted to, it could only be exploded by a cap. I told him I was putting it in a drill hole. He said, You can tamp it [548]*548in the drill hole with an iron or with most anything you happen to have in hand. Q. Did they make any statement to you at any time that this could be struck direct with a steel or iron bar, or anything of that kind? A. Yes, sir. Q. What was that statement? A.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P. 241, 73 Wash. 543, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-usk-hardware-co-wash-1913.