McKee Electric Co. v. Carson Oil Co.

723 P.2d 288, 301 Or. 339
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1986
DocketA8108-04708; CA A29903; SC S31235
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 723 P.2d 288 (McKee Electric Co. v. Carson Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKee Electric Co. v. Carson Oil Co., 723 P.2d 288, 301 Or. 339 (Or. 1986).

Opinion

*341 LENT, J.

The issue is whether on the pleading and evidence the plaintiff 1 was entitled to an instruction on res ipsa loquitur. We hold that the plaintiff was entitled to the instruction.

This is an action to recover damages for physical harm to property and consequential damages incurréd in repairing the property. The plaintiff contends that negligence of the defendant caused a fire that resulted in physical harm to the plaintiffs property. The defendant denied that it was negligent or that it caused the fire. The defendant counterclaimed for damages, contending that the plaintiffs negligence caused the fire and the resulting physical harm to the defendant’s property.

The jury decided that the plaintiff was 20% at fault and defendant was 80% at fault; consequently, the plaintiff had judgment on its claim. The defendant’s assignments of error on appeal went only to the verdict for the plaintiff. On appeal the defendant contended that it was entitled to favorable rulings on its motion for directed verdict against the plaintiffs claims, its motions to withdraw the plaintiffs specifications of negligence and its motion against the plaintiffs claim for consequential damages. Defendant also claimed error because the trial court instructed on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, contending not that it was improper to instruct at all on the doctrine but only that it was improper on the pleading and evidence in this case.

The Court of Appeals held that there was no error with respect to the trial court’s denial of the motion for directed verdict, its rulings on withdrawal of the specifications of negligence and its instructions on res ipsa loquitur. McKee Electric Co. v. Carson Oil Co., 70 Or App 1, 688 P2d 1360 (1984). The Court of Appeals remanded for a new trial on the issue of consequential damages.

The defendant petitioned for review, contending only that the Court of Appeals erred in concluding that “expert testimony was not necessary to enable plaintiff to establish *342 negligence” and in concluding that “the issue of res ipsa loquitur was properly submitted to the jury.” We allowed that petition for review.

Defendant’s petition for review was timely filed. The plaintiff did not timely file a petition for review but filed a response. ORAP 10.05(5) allows a response to be filed within 21 days after the petition for review has been filed. The plaintiff filed its response almost seven weeks after the petition for review had been filed, although within 21 days after this court had allowed the defendant’s petition for review. In its response, without any indication whatsoever on the cover, the plaintiff included a petition for review of the Court of Appeals’ decision on consequential damages. This was untimely as a petition for review; it was untimely as a response. We never allowed it as a petition for review. In our supplemental questions to the parties after allowance of the defendant’s petition for review, we did not address the plaintiffs contentions raised in the petition for review buried in its response.

Under ORAP 10.05(5) the winning party’s brief in the Court of Appeals is considered as a response to the losing party’s petition for review if no response is filed in this court. The defendant’s petition for review is completely silent on the issue of the plaintiffs claim for consequential damages; therefore, we do not consider the plaintiffs brief in the Court of Appeals to be a response to any issues other than those raised in the defendant’s petition for review.

In these circumstances, despite ORAP 10.15(2), we choose not to consider the plaintiffs contentions of error with respect to the issue of consequential damages. 2 We express no opinion on the validity of those contentions.

THE COMPLAINT

The plaintiffs claim for relief is for negligence. The *343 complaint alleges that the defendant made a delivery of gasoline to an underground tank on the plaintiffs premises and

“in a reckless, careless and negligent manner caused the gasoline being delivered to ignite, spread and damage the building located thereon, the personal property located therein, and the motor vehicles located thereon as will be more fully described hereafter.”

The plaintiff then pled that the cause of the damage was the negligence of the defendant in certain particulars and described the damage in detail. Of the particular charges of negligence, the following four were eventually submitted to the jury:

“Defendant’s driver was standing on an elevated loading dock away from his truck so that he could not quickly get to the pump controls and shut off the pump.
“In positioning its truck in close proximity to the fill pipe and vent pipe of the underground tank which was being filled.
“In overfilling the tank causing the nozzle of the delivery hose to come out of the fill pipe and discharge gasoline.
“In causing gasoline to discharge from the vent pipe.”

THE FACTS

There was evidence from which the jury could have found the following.

On the east side of the plaintiffs building was a paved area. Extending from the south wall of the building in an easterly direction was a concrete ledge about two feet high separating the paved area east of the building from another parking area south and southeast of the building. The paved area north of the ledge sloped away from the building to the east. Underneath the paved area was the tank.

The fill pipe for the tank was located about six feet from the east wall of the building and about eight to ten inches north of the ledge. About 24 to 28 feet north of the ledge and two or three feet east of the building was the vent pipe, which was about 11 feet high and had a “cap,” which would cause escaping vapor to deflect downward. Immediately east of the vent pipe was a gasoline pump used to dispense gasoline from the tank.

*344 The underground tank had a capacity of 2,000 gallons. The tank had an offset fill pipe, and there was no way to measure how much gasoline was in the tank. The defendant had filled the tank on many prior occasions. Sometimes the plaintiff had allowed the tank to run dry before ordering a fill. On other occasions the plaintiff had ordered a specified amount of gasoline to be delivered. On this occasion the plaintiff had simply ordered the tank to be filled, not indicating whether or not it was empty.

On prior occasions the defendant’s drivers had sometimes positioned the delivery truck north of the ledge and sometimes south of the ledge. On this occasion the driver positioned his vehicle parallel to and north of the ledge with the front of the truck facing west and about two feet from the east wall of the building. He so positioned the truck because if he had parked it either south of the ledge or farther east he could not completely drain his truck’s tanks.

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Bluebook (online)
723 P.2d 288, 301 Or. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-electric-co-v-carson-oil-co-or-1986.