Matt Soso v. Atlas Powder Company

238 F.2d 388
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 27, 1956
Docket15546_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 F.2d 388 (Matt Soso v. Atlas Powder Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matt Soso v. Atlas Powder Company, 238 F.2d 388 (8th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

WHITTAKER, Circuit Judge.

Appellant was injured by an unexpected explosion of dynamite manufactured by appellee and sued it for damages, charging that it negligently manufactured the dynamite by failing properly to mix the nitroglycerin and inert materials therein, and in negligently storing the same under improper temperature and ventilation conditions, and in selling the same for use with knowledge that it was defective.

The case was tried before a jury. The Court reserved ruling upon appellee’s motion, made at the close of appellant’s evidence and renewed at the close of all the evidence, for a directed verdict in its favor, and submitted the case to the jury, who returned a verdict for appellant in the amount of $40,000.

Appellee timely moved for judgment in its favor, in accordance with its motion for a directed verdict, notwithstanding the verdict of the jury, and the Court sustained that motion and set aside the verdict of the jury, and the judgment thereon, and entered judgment for appellee, upon the ground that appellant’s evidence tended to show two possible causes of the explosion (one, that the ingredients of the dynamite were improperly mixed or stored, and, two, that the dynamite was detonated by improper tamping by appellant), for one of which possible causes appellee would be liable, but for the other not, which left the jury to choose, by guess and conjecture, between two equally consistent possibilities, and thus appellant failed to sustain the burden of proof, and did not make a submissible case for the jury.

From the judgment so entered by the Court below in favor of appellee, appellant has appealed to this Court, contending that his evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to him, made a submissible case for the jury, and that the Court erred in holding otherwise and in entering judgment for appellee.

The question presented necessitates a detailed analysis of the evidence.

The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to appellant, shows that at the time of his injury, he was 55 years of age, and had many years of experience in setting and firing dynamite charges; that, at the time of his injury, he was employed by a contractor engaged in *390 digging a ditch for the laying of a storm sewer, near St. Louis, and they encountered a ledge of rock in the ditch about one foot thick which had to be excavated by the use of dynamite. A case of the necessary dynamite — 40% gelatin dynamite — was obtained from appellee’s magazine in that community and met with no abuse or mishandling from the time obtained from appellee to the time of the event in question.

On the morning involved appellant was directed by his employer to, and he did, drill three holes, between 4 and 5 inches deep, in the ledge of rock referred to with the use of an air drill, the bit of which was 1% inches in diameter, but the resulting holes were slightly larger.

While appellant was engaged in that work, his foreman, Todd, obtained from the toolhouse a stick of this dynamite, which was 8 inches long and about 1 inch in diameter and covered with heavy brown paper sealed at both ends, and, with his poeketknife, cut it into three approximately equal lengths, of about 2% inches each; that this left the dynamite, in the two end pieces, exposed only at one end, but left the dynamite in the center piece exposed at both ends; that Todd then, using a wooden stick about the size of a lead pencil, pushed a hole through the center of the length of each of the pieces of dynamite and inserted in each an electric dynamite cap two inches long — thus leaving about % of an inch of dynamite extending beyond either end of the dynamite cap, which, by the use of his fingers, he crimped over the ends of the dynamite cap and around the electric wires leading from one end thereof. Such a charge, containing a dynamite cap, is called a “primer” or “primer cartridge”. Todd then wrapped the short length of electric wire, running from the dynamite cap, around each primer cartridge and then placed the three primer cartridges in a bucket, which also contained dry sand, and carried the same to the point where appellant was working and, by means of a rope, let the bucket down to appellant.

Todd then went back to the toolhouse and got the battery, used to fire the charges, and placed it on the ground some distance away from where appellant was working, and then unwound the wires leading from the battery and, holding the end of the wires, walked to the edge of the ditch in which appellant was working, and by that time appellant, using the primer cartridges made from the respective ends of the dynamite stick, had completed the loading of the first two holes for firing, and Todd says he watched appellant place the third primer cartridge — the one made from the center of the stick of dynamite and open at both ends — into the third hole and saw appellant push the same to the bottom of the hole with his tamping stick — -which was an ordinary wooden broomstick — and then saw appellant reach into the bucket and obtain a quantity of sand between his fingers and his thumb and place the same in the hole and then saw appellant tamp “lightly” into the hole with the broomstick, whereupon the explosion occurred and appellant was injured.

The foregoing merely sets the stage, but the following facts develop and present the crucial question.

Appellant testified that before inserting these primer cartridges into the holes he examined them to make sure that dynamite “was pushed around the top and bottom of the blasting cap”; that he noticed that the third primer cartridge, “which had no paper on either end”, had a “moldy spot” on one end “in the shape of a half moon”. He said he had seen dynamite that looked like this on 11 or 12 previous occasions and, when fired, it made “a bigger noise”. He says that he placed this primer cartridge in the third hole and pushed it to the bottom of the hole with the broomstick — that dynamite will not be fully effective unless pushed down to the bottom of the hole — and then reached over to the bucket and got some sand between his fingers and his thumb — ■ a teaspoonful or a soupspoonful — and poured it in the hole, and then repeated that process. He then says “I then was *391 all ready, stick like this in it, I was going to raise (the broomstick), to use it and hit it a little bit down and before I hit it it went off while that stick was on top of the hole.”

The other two charges were not detonated by the explosion and were later fired by Todd in the normal way. 1

Though Todd had earlier testified that appellant was tamping the charge at the time of the explosion, appellant, on direct examination, maintained that he had not tamped the charge, but was only getting ready to do so when the explosion occurred, yet on cross examination he admits that he was tamping the charge and had tamped it “one or two strokes” when the explosion happened, 2 and at the argument counsel for appellant conceded that the evidence shows that appellant was tamping the charge at the time of the explosion.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lemm v. Gould
425 S.W.2d 190 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1968)
Universe Tankships, Inc. v. Pyrate Tank Cleaners, Inc.
152 F. Supp. 903 (S.D. New York, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 F.2d 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matt-soso-v-atlas-powder-company-ca8-1956.