Mulholland v. Western Gas Construction Co.

131 P. 110, 21 Cal. App. 44, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 220
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1164.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 131 P. 110 (Mulholland v. Western Gas Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulholland v. Western Gas Construction Co., 131 P. 110, 21 Cal. App. 44, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 220 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

JAMES, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered through the negligence of appellant. As to the second defendant named, judgment of nonsuit was granted and as to which no complaint is made upon this appeal. The jury sitting at the trial of the action returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the principal sum of $10,875, upon which verdict judgment was entered. This appeal is taken from the judgment and from an order denying the motion of appellant for a new trial.

Prior to the twenty-fifth day of January, 1910, appellant was engaged under contract as an independent contractor in erecting a certain apparatus for the manufacture of gas. At the date above mentioned the apparatus had been practically *46 completed, but had not yet been accepted by the gas company for which it was being built, and there remained some work of finishing and adjusting to be done upon it. This was the condition of the work when plaintiff applied to one White, who was in full charge of the construction work, for employment. Plaintiff, a young man, twenty years of age, was a competent plumber and pipefitter and had worked for about two weeks in a gas manufactory, but not in the generating department. White, after asking him some questions as to his experience as a pipefitter, employed him and he went to work immediately. Plaintiff testified that White took him around the apparatus, which consisted mainly of several cylinders of metal standing upright, about ten feet in diameter and twenty-five feet long. The cylinders were 'all capped so as to make complete receptacles for the gas and the material used in generating the same, except one, which had an opening for the introduction of fuel, and another which had an opening at the top for the escape of flame and fumes. The uses served by the various cylinders in the process of the manufacture of gas were fully explained by the evidence, but that narrative need not here be repeated, as the conditions which surrounded the plaintiff and the manner in which he received his injuries can be briefly explained. Of course, any inconsistency in the plaintiff’s testimony, or contradiction of his statements by other witnesses, cannot be considered in argument against the verdict of the jury, because it was for the jury to determine the facts and with their determination we can raise ño question so long as some evidence in support thereof is shown in the record. Plaintiff testified that after looking about the apparatus he was shown, at the top of one of the tanks called a scrubber, a pipe connection, the pipe being attached to the tank by the use of a bushing, which was a fitting used to screw into a threaded aperture in the tank and to which bushing in turn the pipe fixture was screwed; that White told him that the bushing was loose and leaked, and asked him if he could fix it; that he said yes, that he would see what he could do with it, and was told to get a helper to assist him; that he had asked White if the machine was shut down and White had replied: “Yes, shut down, ain’t no danger here.” The next day he returned with his helper and they took out the bushing and tried to make it *47 tight with some cord and white lead, but failed; that he reported to White and told him that he could not fix the bushing without a lock-nut and that there were no such nuts at the storeroom, and White replied: “Leave it out, or-leave it alone, and I will get you a lock-nut when I go up town.” The bushing was left out and consequently there was left open an aperture in the top of the scrubber tank of about two and one-half inches in diameter. Pending the securing of a lock-nut, plaintiff was instructed by White to bring in a certain gas meter and attach it to a tank, and he was at work at this when he received the injuries complained of. Thirty or forty feet away from the apparatus upon which plaintiff was at work was a gas generator in active operation. As was usual with such machines, at regular intervals there would be a burst, of flame from the top of the generator, which would last for a few moments, and oftentimes following this discharge sparks would fall about in the vicinity of the apparatus. The top of the scrubber from which plaintiff had removed the bushing was not protected so as to prevent sparks falling upon it, and it does not appear that it was usual to provide such protection. Near to and below the top of the scrubber referred to was laid a floor made of sheets of iron which were not fastened, but fitted upon iron beams which supported them. While plaintiff was at work with the meter on the ground near the scrubber, an explosion. occurred from within the scrubber, which the evidence tended to show was caused by a spark or sparks from the neighboring generator falling into the aperture of the scrubber from which the bushing had been removed. This explosion caused several of the iron plates of the floor referred to to be dislodged, and one of these plates in falling struck plaintiff on the head, crushing a portion of his skull and inflicting serious and permanent injuries.

It is argued on behalf of appellant that under the facts shown plaintiff was not entitled to recover because: 1. That the risk of the injury which was caused to him was one assumed by him as a risk ordinary to his employment; and 2. That the injuries were caused through his own contributory negligence.

It was not shown by any testimony that plaintiff was familiar with the method of manufacturing gas, or that *48 he knew just how the apparatus upon which he was employed to work was operated. He did know that, as was a fact, the scrubber contained warter, or that water was made to percolate through it, but he had no knowledge that the receptacle contained gas or was in a condition which made it dangerous to leave open the hole-from which he detached the-bushing. He testified that there was an odor of gas all about the place, but that odor, of course, was common about' the premises of a gas-manufacturing establishment. Moreover, he did take the precaution, according to his sworn statement, to inquire of White whether the machine was in operation or not, and was told by White that it was shut down and that there was no danger there. White was the representative of his employer and a man experienced in the handling of gas-making apparatus. Plaintiff was entitled to rely upon the assurances of his employer as to the absence of danger, unless by observation something was brought to his attention which would give him knowledge of a contrary state of things. But not only was there evidence to show the statement of White as narrated above, but there was evidence of the further direction of White given to plaintiff, when the latter informed White that he could not fix the bushing without a lock-nut, to “leave it out, or leave it alone.” White told the plaintiff that the machine was shut down and that there was no danger; then when informed of what the plaintiff had done with respect to the bushing, told him to leave it out; in other words, to leave the aperture open, for it could not be closed without the use of a bushing. Plaintiff followed these instructions, left the bushing out while waiting for White to obtain the lock-nut, and went about the other work that was assigned to him to do by his employer. Considering all of these facts, it cannot be said either that there was any assumption of the risk by plaintiff, or any negligence on his part concurring to produce Ms injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
131 P. 110, 21 Cal. App. 44, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulholland-v-western-gas-construction-co-calctapp-1913.