Phillips v. Doyle

207 P.2d 465, 167 Kan. 376, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 11, 1949
DocketNo. 36,981
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 207 P.2d 465 (Phillips v. Doyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Doyle, 207 P.2d 465, 167 Kan. 376, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 400 (kan 1949).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, J.:

This was an action by a minor, brought by his next friend and father, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained as the result of a fire which occurred at the farm home of his employer where he was employed as a farm hand. The case was tried by a jury which returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff upon which, after overruling the usual post-trial motions, the district court rendered judgment. Thereupon defendants appealed. They concede the sole issue on appellate review is whether the trial court erred in overruling their demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence.

For present purposes, since the pleadings are not in controversy, it will suffice to relate in substance the contents of the petition. It states the defendants, Doyle and' Campbell, on all dates in question were partners doing business at Lakin, Kan., as the Service Oil Company, where they maintained storage tanks in which they kept [377]*377gasoline, kerosene and other petroleum products for sale and delivered such products when sold to their farmer customers and others through the medium of a rural delivery service operated by them and their employee Guy Laney, also a defendant.

It then charges that sometime prior to September 12, 1945, the date of the occurrence of the events responsible for the institution of the action, the defendants carelessly and negligently permitted their storage tanks and pipes by which they were connected and equipped to become rusted and in a defective condition with the result gasoline and kerosene became mixed and they delivered a mixture of these products instead of kerosene as ordered, to one Henry Allen at his farm home, placing it in a barrel located on an elevated stand in a small room off the kitchen from which there was no exit except through the kitchen; that later defendants were advised of their error and after dark on the evening of September 12, at about 8:30 p. m. Laney came to the Allen home, stated that he was there to pick up the mixture which he had sold them for kerosene and, over the warning and protest of Mrs. Allen that such mixture was dangerous and should not be moved at night, proceeded to attempt to remove it at a time when there was a lighted kerosene lantern sitting on the floor of the room where it was located and an open fire burning in the bathroom near by, all of which facts were known or should have been known to such defendant in the exercise of ordinary care and caution.

It next alleges that Laney filled two five-gallon cans with the mixture from the barrel and started to leave the small room to empty their contents into the defendants’ tank wagon but that as he did so he carelessly and negligently tripped, stumbled or fell, overturned the lantern, and spilled such contents, which ran under a partition into the bathroom and into the kitchen of the home and subsequently became ignited and burst into flames.

The petition then asserts the plaintiff who was in the small room, engaged in the performance of some work of his employment, and whose only means of escape from the house was through the room in which the fire was burning and then into the kitchen was forced to come through the flames with the result he was badly burned and suffered injuries, the extent and character of which are not an issue nor the amount of damages allowed therefore challenged as excessive.

[378]*378Finally such pleading charges that all injuries sustained by plaintiff as a consequence of the fire were the direct and proximate result of the careless and negligent action and conduct of the defendants while acting as therein alleged and in addition specifies ten specific acts of negligence on their part which are alleged to have contributed to and been responsible for the situation which caused the injuries sustained by him.

Mindful of the rule (See Picou v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 156 Kan. 452, 134 P. 2d 686; Roddy v. Hill Packing Co., 156 Kan. 706, 137 P. 2d 215; Ripper v. City of Canton, 166 Kan. 185, 187, 199 P. 2d 815) that in passing on a demurrer to evidence an appellate court is concerned only with evidence and inferences to be adduced therefrom which supports a cause of action and does not weigh testimony we now give consideration to arguments advanced by appellants in support of their position the appellee’s evidence wholly fails to sustain the judgment.

At the outset our attention is directed to the oil inspection law of this state (G. S. 1935, ch. 55 art. 4) and to Oil Co. v. Rankin, 68 Kan. 679, 75 Pac. 1013, construing its terms. It is urged that by reason thereof appellee was required to plead and prove the mixture of kerosene and gasoline delivered at the Allen home was not inspected as required by the provisions of such statute in order to maintain and establish any cause of action against them for negligence. This claim has little merit. Reference to the decision cited discloses it expressly states the purpose of the act is to require all oils to be tested before being put on the market. We find nothing in the decision or in the act itself which can be construed as relieving a distributor of petroleum products from the consequences of negligent action in mixing kerosene and gasoline after he has purchased such products for purposes of sale.

Appellants’ next two contentions can be considered together. They insist there was nothing in the evidence which tended to prove Doyle and Campbell negligently mixed gasoline and kerosene and sold the mixture as kerosene or that there was any testimony which would prove or tend to prove Laney was negligent in falling and spilling such mixture. We are not disposed to labor the record. It suffices to say both Mrs. Allen and Laney testified kerosene had been ordered and a mixture of gasoline and kerosene delivered instead and that the latter had been sent out to pick it up. Mrs. Allen also testified that Laney had theretofore inquired of her if [379]*379the Allens had any of the mixture, stating it had become mixed somehow in the lines, and that if so both Doyle and Campbell had ordered him to pick it up. That, to say nothing of other testimony susceptible of similar inferences, was sufficient to take the question of appellants’ negligence on the first point mentioned to the jury. So far as the second is concerned it makes little difference whether Laney tripped and fell as the result of carelessness. The fact the appellants attempted to move the mixture from the Allen home after dark, under conditions and circumstances alleged in the petition which were all established by testimony, particularly over the warning and protest of Mrs. Allen, was evidence of negligence and in and of itself was sufficient to sustain a conclusion that the fire resulted therefrom.

The next claim advanced by appellants will be considered out of the order in which it is argued. They insist appellee’s evidence discloses he was guilty of contributory negligence as a, matter of law in that he attempted to extinguish the fire by tramping on it when he could have escaped without injury. There was testimony to the effect that when the fire first started there was only a small blaze noticeable and that appellee, who was then only sixteen years of age, attempted to stamp it out. Moreover, appellee testified his clothing did not catch on fire when he stamped the blaze, but as a result of the explosion. In addition it clearly appears from the record that Laney, who was closer to a position of safety, was caught in the flame following the same explosion and also severely burned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 P.2d 465, 167 Kan. 376, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-doyle-kan-1949.