Ohio & Indiana Torpedo Co. v. Fishburn

61 Ohio St. (N.S.) 608
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 61 Ohio St. (N.S.) 608 (Ohio & Indiana Torpedo Co. v. Fishburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio & Indiana Torpedo Co. v. Fishburn, 61 Ohio St. (N.S.) 608 (Ohio 1900).

Opinion

Spear, J.

Complaint is made by plaintiff in error of the admission of incompetent testimony against its objection, to the refusal of the trial court to give instructions to the jury requested by it, and to the charge as given.

1. The question of evidence. One Heron, a witness for the plaintiff below, had testified that he had resided at Bowling Green, Wood county, about nine years; that he had been engaged in the business of shooting oil wells for about thirty years, and was acquainted with the duties of one called upon to shoot a well, and knew the prevailing custom in that respect. He was then asked this question:

“Now, I will ask you, Mr. Heron, suppose the shooter of a well brings one hundred quarts of nitroglycerine to said well, the nitro-glycerine had been placed in the shells, lowered in the well, the well logged in, the derrick boarded up, except the opening facing towards the engine and belt house, the said well being at a distance of from 80 to 200 feet of the residence and buildings- adjoining and surrounding it, located in a village of twelve to thirteen hundred people; the condition of the atmosphere such that when the gas is liberated from the well, it settles to the surface of the earth; would the hour of 7 :80 o’clock on the seventh day of September in any year when darkness had intervened so that fires and lights are lit in certain of such business and dwelling houses be, in your opinion, a proper time to shoot such well; that is to say, explode such torpedo therein?”

Objection by the Torpedo Company was overruled and exception entered.

Answer: “It is not a proper hour.”

[613]*613The objection urged is that this was error because the fact sought was a matter to be found by the jury. We do not think the admission of the evidence was error. The fact called for was evidentiary. It tended to prove one fact involved in the issue, but was not the ultimate fact in issue. Nor was it a subject of common knowledge, or one of which the jury could as well judge as the witness. As an expert his knowledge extended to all the dangers incident to an explosion of such a quantity of nitro-glycerine at such a place, at such an hour, and with such surroundings. The average juror might not intelligently and fully determine the natural connection between cause and effect, and draw the proper conclusion from the general facts proven. At least the jury might be aided in that duty by the opinion of one whose experience and knowledge, especially as to the violent effects incident to the explosion, and as to the inflammable character of gas when mixed with the atmosphere and brought in contact with fire, and the extent of the attendant dangers, was greatly superior to their own. Steamboat Clipper v. Logan, 18 Ohio, 375; Stewart v. The State, 19 Ohio, 302; Protection Ins. Co. v. Harmer, 2 Ohio St., 452; Railroad Co. v. Schultz, 43 Ohio St., 270.

2. Instruction refused. The defendant, the Ohio & Indiana Torpedo Company, requested the court to charge the jury as follows:

“If the jury find from the evidence that the Torpedo Company’s servant placed the torpedo in the well as directed by Grant, the owner, and that after it was in place, the owner said to the company’s servant that he, the owner, would drop the go-devil; and if they further find that the torpedo was so placed and arranged that it could be surely exploded by dropping the go-devil, and that it was so exploded; and if the jury also find that the owner did explode said torpedo, then the jury would be justified in finding that the owner of the well assumed the duty [614]*614and responsibility of exploding tbe torpedo himself; and if the jury so find, then the responsibility of the Torpedo Company ended with the proper placing of the torpedo,. and it can not be made liable in damages to the plaintiff in this action.”

The request was properly refused. The term “as directed by Grant, the owner,” is indefinite. It does not adequately express the supposition that Grant was in exclusive 'control of the work, and had assumed the duty and responsibility, as between him and the Company, of exploding the torpedo himself so as to justify the conclusion that the Company could not be liable in damages to plaintiff, even if, in any condition of the case as between the defendants that conclusion would be warranted. It appears to be based upon the assumption that the Company, although negligent itself as between it and the plaintiff, might escape responsibility by showing that Grant was also negligent, and leave out of view the duty of the Company’s servant to see that the explosion of the torpedo was made at a time when, under the circumstances, it was reasonably safe to explode it, as well with respect to the public as to the persons engaged in thb work. Whether or not the Company was negligent in that regard depended upon the evidence as to the entire transaction, and not wholly upon whether the agent placed the torpedo as directed by Grant and left it to be exploded by Grant, and was one of the questions to be determined by the jury upon tiie whole evidence.

3. The charge as given. At request of defendant, Grant, the court gave in the charge the following, viz:

“First. If you find from the evidence that nitroglycerine is a dangerous explosive, and that the defendant Torpedo Company used nitro-glycerine in shooting the oil well in question, and if you further find that in the shooting of said well, gas was liable to arise therefrom, which gas was liable to ignite [615]*615and explode, it was the duty of said Torpedo Company to so handle, use and control said nitro-glycerine and not to explode the same, unless the conditions and surroundings of said oil well were such as not to be liable to cause the gas arising from such well to ignite or explode, and if said defendant Torpedo Company failed or omitted to perform its duty in this regard, such failure and omission would be negligence on the part of said Torpedo Company.”
“Second. If the business of shooting oil wells is attended with danger to persons and property in the vicinity, and if such business requires the exercise of especial knowledge and skill, and if the defendant, the Ohio & Indiana Torpedo Company, at the time of shooting said well was a reputable company, skilled in said business, the defendant, George E. Grant, had the right to employ said Company to do the shooting of said well, and had the right to rely upon the care and skill of said Company in the performance of said work.”
“Third. If you find from the evidence that the defendant, George E. Grant, had the well in question in readiness to be shot, and that the defendant, Torpedo Company, undertook to do the work of shooting said well, and commenced the same in time so that in the usual and ordinary course of such work the same would have been completed before darkness set in, and if the defendant, Torpedo Company, from any cause delayed the work, so that it did not have said shot ready to explode until darkness set in, and if the jury find from the evidence that the exploding of said shot at that time was negligent, and that said Torpedo Company so caused the same to be done at that time, and by reason thereof an injury occurred to the plaintiff, the defendant, the Torpedo Company, would be liable therefor.”

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61 Ohio St. (N.S.) 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-indiana-torpedo-co-v-fishburn-ohio-1900.