Moore v. Jefferson Distilling & Denaturing Co.

126 So. 691, 169 La. 1156, 1930 La. LEXIS 1650
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 3, 1930
DocketNo. 30360.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 126 So. 691 (Moore v. Jefferson Distilling & Denaturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Jefferson Distilling & Denaturing Co., 126 So. 691, 169 La. 1156, 1930 La. LEXIS 1650 (La. 1930).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This suit was brought against defendant in the district court for Jefferson parish by Mrs. May B. Moore, as tutrix for her minor child, Olive May Moore, for damages in the sum of $35,000 for the alleged negligent killing of Lucas E. Moore, the late father of the minor and husband of the plaintiff.

From a judgment in favor of defendant, plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeal for the Parish of Orleans. The judgment of the *1159 lower court was reversed, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, as tutrix of the minor, in the sum of $10,000, with legal interest from judicial demand. This judgment is now before us for review, under a writ of certiorari issued to the Court of Appeal.

Lucas E. Moore, at the time of his death, was vice president of the Lucas E. Moore Stave Company.

During the month of January, 1925, the Moore Stave Company agreed with the Mar-land Refining Company, acting for the Northwestern Supply Company, to receive at the Moore Company's plant at or near Southport in Jefferson parish 500 steel drums, to fill the drums with gasoline, and to deliver same to shipside in New Orleans, as ordered by the Northwestern Supply Company.

In the early part of February, 1925, the Marland Refining Company entered into an agreement with Edwin J. Putzell to purchase for the purposes above mentioned 500 steel drums, which, Putzell represented, had never been used.

The defendant, the Jefferson Distilling & Denaturing Company, sold these drums to Putzell, f. o. b. cars at its plant. The drums were there inspected and accepted by the purchaser, and on February 11, 1925, were shipped, in the name of and by the direction of the purchaser, to the Lucas E. Mopre Stave Company at Southport, in the parish of Jefferson.

While the drums were being unloaded from box cars at the plant of the Moore. Stave Company, a sound was detected," as if caused by some gritty substance contained in the drums. Mr. Moore’s attention was called to this fact by an employee of the Moore Stave Company, who had concluded from the incident that the drums had been used. A further investigation ensued, during which a drum was opened and found to contain a dark, gritty deposit, which colored the gasoline when mixed with the deposit in a test tube. Mr. Putzell was present and was advised as to the condition of this particular drum, which rendered it unfit as a container of gasoline, and, after examining a number of drums, one was found which, he insisted, was free from any sediment and had not been used. This drum was separated from the rest, and, when the bung was removed, a gaseous vapor was emitted. Mr. Moore and Mr. Putzell both applied their noses to the bunghole and also looked into the drum. Mr. Moore contended that he had discovered a liquid in the drum, but Mr. Putzell disagreed with him.

In order to settle the question, an employee was sent for an electric light with which to examine the interior of the drum. Before the employee could return, Mr. Putzell suddenly drew some matches from his pocket, and applied a lighted match to the bunghole of the drum. A loud explosion instantly followed, blew out the head of the drum nearest to Mr. Moore, striking him with- great violence, and inflicting severe injuries from which he died.

Plaintiff’s right to recover in this case is predicated: First, upon the assumption that Mr. Putzell acted as the agent of an undisclosed principal, and that the defendant, the Jefferson Distilling & Denaturing Company, was that principal; and, secondly, upon the alleged negligence of the defendant company in placing upon the market unlabeled steel drums, which had contained alcohol, an explosive substance.

1. The first ground, that Mr. Putzell acted as the agent of defendant company in *1161 the sale of the drums to the Marland Refining Company, is not sustained by the evidence in the case. As shown by the evidence, Mr. Putzell is a merchant in the city of New Orleans, and is engaged in the business of retailing steel drums.

The company he represented in the city of New Orleans, at the time of the accident, was the Draper Manufacturing Company of Cleveland, the largest producer of steel drums in the United States. The evidence shows that Mr. Putzell purchased the drums delivered to the Moore Stave Company on an order from the Marland Refining Company, and that these drums were invoiced to him and were shipped in his name to the plant of the Moore Stave Company.

2. We have no difficulty in arriving at the conclusion that the drums sold by defendant company to Putzell and delivered by him to the Moore Stave Company included some drums that had been used.

That this was due to the casual inspection of these drums at the warehouse of defendant company is made plain by the testimony of A. M. Smythe, who represented the Moore Stave Company in this inspection. Defendant company also had a representative present. This witness testified that only a certain percentage of the drums that defendant said were to be shipped were looked into here and there in the pile; that only the bungs of this percentage were removed, and a flashlight put into the bungholes; and that only these drums were found to be clean and in fit condition to carry gasoline. In other words, all of the 500 drums to be shipped were not inspected. As shown by the evidence, these drums were stocked on the bilges in the warehouse of defendant company in pyramidal piles five feet high.

3. This brings us to 'the consideration of the Questions whether defendant was guilty of negligence in placing upon the market these drums, without any labels warning the purchaser that they had contained alcohol; and whether defendant’s negligence, if any, was the proximate cause of the explosion that resulted in the death of Lucas E. Moore.

In the opinion of the Court of Appeal it is stated: “To ship drums containing explosive and inflammatory gases in place of new or unused drums, whether done, as suggested by counsel for plaintiff, deliberately, or, as seems to us more probable, inadvertently, was an act of negligence, for the reasonably expected consequences of which defendant is liable to third persons.”

Able counsel for defendant company complain that the Court of Appeal erred in predicating its opinion upon the breach of the contract in this case.

There was, in fact, no contractual relationship of any kind existing between defendant and decedent, or between defendant and decedent’s company. Defendant made a contract with Putzell to sell and deliver a quantity of steel drums. After this contract had been made, Putzell in turn made a contract to sell the same .drums to the Marland Refining Company at a price which presumably netted him. a profit. The Marland Refining Company employed the Lucas B. Moore Stave Company to fill the drums with gasoline, and it was only through this employment that decedent came into the contact with the drums. As there was no privity of contract, a breach of the contract cannot be taken advantage of by plaintiff. Standard Oil Co. v. Murray (C. C. A.) 119 F. 572.

The Jefferson Distilling & Denaturing Company did not manufacture the drums, *1163 and hence

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Bluebook (online)
126 So. 691, 169 La. 1156, 1930 La. LEXIS 1650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-jefferson-distilling-denaturing-co-la-1930.