Oklahoma Tire & Supply Co. v. Williams

181 F.2d 675, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 1950
Docket14046
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 F.2d 675 (Oklahoma Tire & Supply Co. v. Williams) 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
Oklahoma Tire & Supply Co. v. Williams, 181 F.2d 675, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680 (8th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

The judgment here appealed from awarded recovery to each of the several plaintiffs in the action for damages occasioned to them respectively by a fire which injured one of the plaintiffs bodily and destroyed property of the others. The fire was started during the cooking of family dinner by flames coming out of the oven of the oil cook stove in which biscuits were being baked. The flames went forward when the oven door was opened and injured the plaintiff who was attending to the cooking, and backward through vents in the oven to the wallpaper right behind the stove, and circled the ceiling of the kitchen and spread to the rest of the dwelling house and to an adjacent barn, and destroyed both. It also destroyed the stove. The plaintiff, Thomas F. Redick, bought the stove on March 8, 1948, at defendant’s retail store in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and the members of his family used it for cooking the family meals continuously for eight months and twenty seven days and were so using it,throughout the morning when the fire occurred on December 5, 1948. The action was against the defendant as seller of the stove and was predicated on the charge that the stove was defective when sold and that defendant was negligent in failing to inspect, discover and remedy the defects or advise plaintiffs thereof, and that the defects caused the emission of the flames from the oven of the stove and the consequent damages to the person and to the property of the respective plaintiffs. On the trial of the case to the court without a jury it was the theory of the plaintiffs, as stated by the trial court, “that the fire was caused by a leak on or near a burner of the oven compartment of the stove” and the court found “that defendant sold the plaintiffs [Mr. and Mrs. Redick] a kerosene stove that was dangerously defective,” “that it would have been impossible for the fire to have odcur-red as it did if a leak had not existed and if the kerosene had not escaped through such leak.” It also found that “a careful inspection of the burner by a competent inspector would have disclosed the location and extent of the leak and the cause thereof.” It concluded that defendant as a dealer was guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of plaintiffs’ damage, and failed to exercis.e the ordinary, care of a reasonably competent and prudent dealer in that it failed to conduct reasonably effective inspections and failed to correct the defective and dangerous condition of the stove or to apprise the plaintiffs thereof. The written opinion of the court, including the order for the judgment which was entered, is reported at 85 F.Supp. 260.

On its appeal to this court the seller of the stove contends that there was no substantial evidence that there was a leak in the stove which was the proximate cause of< the damages to the plaintiffs and the judgment against it was therefore erroneous.

Opinion.

It appears undisputed that the stove in question in this case was manufactured by and bore the identifying name of Perfection Stove Company, a reputable manufacturer of kerosene stoves sold throughout the country for more than sixty years. Model 888 bought by Mr. Redick was brought out in 1939 and 158,000 of them ■had been sold at the end of 1948. They have three separate burners for cooking on the top of the stove at the left side and two burners set below the oven on the right side, all alike, and of the long chimney wick type of which Perfection has made and *677 sold 13,762,664 in the last twenty fi re years. Model 888 carries the approval label of Underwriters Laboratories of the National Board of Fire Underwriters, meaning that the model was submitted to and tested and approved by that institution, and it was shown that each stove as it was manufactured was tested at the factory for leaks by subjecting the full line assemblies to air pressure and immersing them in water, and after being fully assembled fuel was put in and each stove was lit and allowed to burn and was again checked to make sure against leaks.

The stove in question was shipped from the warehouse of Perfection Stove Company in Kansas City directly to defendant’s store in Hot Springs in a crate with the burners fastened in position by wires attached to the stove. Defendant removed it from the crate and placed it on exhibition for sale in its store window. There was no evidence that it had suffered any mishandling or damage of any kind in transportation or uncrating. The plaintiffs, Mr. Redick and his wife, had seen a similar type stove in a friend’s home and had examined such a stove in a store in Conway, Arkansas, and noticing the one in defendant’s show window, Mr. Redick told defendant’s salesman that he was interested in a Perfection oil stove and from that approach Mr. Redick proceeded to buy it from defendant.

He took it from the store to his home himself, and set it in place in his kitchen, removed the wires with which the burners were held in their position and as stated, members of his family did al-1 the household cooking with it continuously for nearly nine months until the fire occurred.

The burners for the top of the stove never gave any trouble. Their position in the stove was such that the cook standing on the floor could readily see the condition and position of the wicks and the color of the flame which showed whether the burners were working properly or not and could move the wick up or down by turning the hand wheel without stooping over. But the burners for the oven were mounted at the bottom of the stove on a sliding metal member adapted to hold them in proper position which member was drawn forward over an opened lower door when the burners were being lighted or cleaned or refueled and pushed back under the oven when in operation. Located in that position, although the lower door was left open, they were not as conveniently observable by the cook as were the top burners. The hand wheels were extended to within her reach as she stooped over a little but decided stooping was required to watch the flame.

Accordingly, as detailed in the opinion of the trial court, the ladies of Mr. Redick’s family who did the cooking with the stove suffered annoyances and made complaints, to the defendant about the working of the oven burners. One or the other or both of said burners (the witnesses did not specify) smoked and emitted fumes, soot and smoke into the kitchen and at times flames flared up in the area below the oven. But adjustment of the wick of the offending burner or burners by turning the wick’s hand wheel never failed to eliminate the improper combustion and to restore proper operation of the burners at any time during the nearly nine months’ daily operation and until the occurrence of the fire. There was no instance in which the smoking, sooting, or flaming from the oven burners caused the cook to cease or desist from her cooking. She would merely adjust the wick and restore proper burning and so accomplished all the family cooking with the stove.

The day in and day out work of cooking required the cook to watch the whole oven part of the stove to keep it clean; to observe the burner wicks closely to maintain them in proper condition and to put in new ones as needed; to.

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Bluebook (online)
181 F.2d 675, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-tire-supply-co-v-williams-ca8-1950.