Peoples Supply, Inc. v. Vogel-Ritt of Penn-Mar-Va., Inc.

173 F. Supp. 199, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2984
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. West Virginia
DecidedDecember 19, 1958
DocketCiv. A. No. 213-M
StatusPublished

This text of 173 F. Supp. 199 (Peoples Supply, Inc. v. Vogel-Ritt of Penn-Mar-Va., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples Supply, Inc. v. Vogel-Ritt of Penn-Mar-Va., Inc., 173 F. Supp. 199, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2984 (N.D.W. Va. 1958).

Opinion

BOREMAN, District Judge.

This action was instituted in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, West Virginia, by Peoples Supply, Inc., a West Virginia corporation, against Vogel-Ritt of Penn-Mar-Va., Inc., a Maryland corporation, based on alleged negligence resulting in the destruction by fire of the plaintiff’s flour mill. On motion of the defendant, the case was removed to this court on the ground of diversity of citizenship.

As a result of its loss due to the fire, Peoples Supply was indemnified in part by American Central Insurance Co., a Missouri corporation, Camden Fire Insurance Assn., a New Jersey corporation, Fidelity-Phenix Insurance Co., a New York corporation, Insurance Company of North America, a Pennsylvania corporation, and The Millers Mutual Fire Insurance Co., a Pennsylvania corporation, all of which were subsequently joined as plaintiffs, real parties in interest.

By agreement, the case was tried to the Court in lieu of a jury, and the parties stipulated that the damages suffered by the plaintiffs as a result of the fire amounted to $225,000.

The defendant is a corporation engaged in the business of pest control and extermination. On April 23, 1957, the defendant by written contract undertook, for a valuable consideration, to fumigate certain buildings owned by Peoples Supply in Charles Town, West Virginia. These buildings had been used for many years by Peoples Supply and others in the operation of a grain, feed and flour processing, milling and manufacturing business.

In oi'der to minimize the expense of the fumigation service, Peoples Supply agreed to furnish two of its own employees to assist the defendant in preparing the buildings for fumigation. The defendant had furnished this service to Peoples Supply on several prior occasions and had always, under the same arrangement, been so assisted by general employees of Peoples Supply in the preparation of the buildings.

On May 17, 1957, between 8:30 and 8:45 A.M., Paul May and Clarence Cromer, two employees of the defendant, arrived on the premises of the plaintiff, Peoples Supply, for the purpose of preparing the flour mill and warehouse for fumigation. To prepare the buildings for fumigation, it was necessary to seal the windows, doors and other cracks and outlets to prevent the escape of a deadly gas, called methane, which was to be released inside the sealed buildings. The sealing process is accomplished by spreading a type of petroleum jelly or petrolatum, called “protopet”, on newspapers, tearing the papers thus treated into strips of various sizes, and placing them around windows and doors and over the cracks and outlets found in the walls of the buildings.

In accordance with the agreement between the parties, the Mill Superintendent of Peoples Supply, Ernest Hahn, ordered two Peoples Supply employees, James Whittington and Clarence Robinson, to assist the defendant’s employees in sealing the buildings. Thereupon, Robinson joined May and Cromer on the second floor of the flour mill building.

Since the protopet was cold and stiff, and therefore difficult to spread, the Vogel-Ritt employees suggested that it would spread more easily if it were heated ; whereupon Robinson, one of the Peoples Supply employees, picked up an [201]*201eight or ten quart bucket about two-thirds full of protopet and carried it to the “bleaching room”. In the bleaching room there was an electric space heater upon which, after turning the heater switch to “High”, Robinson placed the bucket. At the time, the bucket had a coating of protopet on its outside surface, which had accumulated therefrom prior usage.

After placing the bucket on the heater, Robinson walked past Cromer, told him where the bucket was, and proceeded to the third floor of the mill to begin work. Cromer went to the bleaching room to check on the bucket’s location and then returned to the room where he was engaged in spreading the newspapers with protopet. After Robinson had left for the third floor, Whittington, the other Peoples Supply employee, arrived at the second floor, set up a work bench, and began to spread protopet on the newspapers. As they worked, Cromer faced the bleaching room and Whittington faced Cromer with his back to the bleaching room. About ten to fifteen minutes after Whittington began work, Cromer noticed smoke coming from the vicinity of the bleaching room, whereupon he, followed by Whittington, ran to the bleacher room and looked in. Both men saw that the room was afire and gave the alarm. Thereupon, all four of the workers evacuated the building. Whittington returned with a fire extinguisher, but was unsuccessful in his attempts to subdue the fire and, in spite of the efforts of the local fire department, the building burned to the ground.

The plaintiffs’ theories of recovery are based upon the following contentions: (1) that the fire was caused by the protopet being placed on the heater; (2) that Robinson and Whittington became special employees of Vogel-Ritt under the loaned-servant doctrine; (3) that the fire was a result of negligence on the part of Robinson, May and Cromer, in allowing the protopet to become overheated on the heater; (4) that if Robinson did not become the special servant of the defendant, there was no actionable negligence on the part of Robinson, but that his action was the result of negligence on the part of May and Cromer in prompting Robinson to put the bucket on the heater; and (5) that if Robinson remained the servant of Peoples Supply, Robinson was not contributorily negligent, because he could not reasonably have anticipated Cromer’s failure to tend the bucket of protopet, and because the proximate character of Robinson’s contribution, if any, to the fire was broken by Cromer’s assuming full control over the heater and the bucket of protopet.

On the other hand, the defendant urges the following: (1) that the protopet did not cause the fire; (2) that if the protopet did cause the fire, it was the negligence of Robinson which was responsible; (3) that Robinson did not become the special employee of the defendant, but remained the employee of Peoples Supply; and (4) that the omission of Cromer to watch the bucket of protopet did not constitute actionable negligence.

Much testimony and argument were offered by both sides bearing on the initial question as to whether the protopet was, or could have been, the actual cause of the fire. The characteristics of both protopet and the electric heater were inquired into at great lengths, and the results of a number of experiments were introduced. However, in view of the Court’s findings and conclusions, this question of whether protopet was the guilty offender is, for the purposes of this decision, purely academic and need not be conclusively decided. But the Court will, for the purpose of inquiring into the other questions presented, assume that the protopet, being heated as stated, was the direct cause of the fire and the plaintiffs’ losses, which assumption will be considered as fact throughout the remainder of this opinion.

The first and most important consideration is as to whether Robinson and Whittington, the general employees of Peoples Supply, became the special employees of the defendant under the [202]*202loaned-servant doctrine for the purpose of the particular job of sealing the flour mill.

As stated in 44 W.Va.L.Q. 75 (1937), “The rule is well established that a general servant may be lent or hired by his master to another party for some special purpose so as to become, as to that service, the servant of the other”. Standard Oil Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
173 F. Supp. 199, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-supply-inc-v-vogel-ritt-of-penn-mar-va-inc-wvnd-1958.