Preston A. Parkinson v. The California Company, a Corporation, and Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, a Corporation

255 F.2d 265, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5402
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 1958
Docket5677_1
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 255 F.2d 265 (Preston A. Parkinson v. The California Company, a Corporation, and Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preston A. Parkinson v. The California Company, a Corporation, and Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, a Corporation, 255 F.2d 265, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5402 (10th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

*267 PICKETT, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiffs, as owners of a cafe and bar in the town of Jackson, Wyoming, brought this action against defendants as the manufacturers of liquid propane gas, for personal injuries and property damages caused by an explosion. The complaint alleged that the defendants’ 1 failure to properly odorize certain liquid propane gas at the time of sale and delivery to a purchaser, who in turn sold it to plaintiffs, was negligence and the proximate cause of the explosion. The trial court sustained a motion to dismiss, and judgment was entered for the defendants. Applying the rule that a manufacturer of an article which is inherently dangerous to human safety is liable for injuries to persons beyond the immediate purchaser for foreseeable consequences of negligence, this court held the allegation that defendants failed to odorize the liquid gas was “sufficient to carry the plaintiff past a motion to dismiss.” Parkinson v. California Co., 10 Cir., 233 F.2d 432, 437. Upon remand the case was tried to the court without a jury, resulting in judgment for the defendants. This appeal is from that judgment.

There is no substantial dispute as to the material facts. In 1948 the California Company entered into a contract with Stanolind, and other producers of oil and gas in the Rangely Field, Rio Blanco County, Colorado, for the construction and operation of a gasoline plant. Under the terms of this agreement, the producers were permitted to take in kind their proportionate shares of liquid petroleum gas. McHade L. P. Gas Company, a Wyoming corporation, purchased Stanolind’s share of this product, not exceeding 125,000 gallons per month. McHade, a transportation company, delivered the liquid gas to Teton Gas and Appliance Company, 2 also a Wyoming corporation. Teton retailed liquid gas and sold and installed facilities for use of the gas, within its trade territory, which included Jackson, Wyoming. 3 The two companies were headquartered togethered in Rock Springs, Wyoming. They were owned and operated by the same individuals, with the same officers. Barney DeCora, who had considerable experience in the liquid gas business, was President of McHade, Secretary-Treasurer of Teton, and General Manager of both, as well as General Manager of several other corporations owned by the same individuals and engaged in retail distribution of propane gas. He subscribed to trade magazines and read literature concerning his business. He was familiar with the dangers in using the product.

During the years 1952 and 1953 the plaintiff was engaged in remodeling portions of his cafe and bar. Included in this project was the installation of a restaurant type kitchen range, a water heater in the basement of the building, and the necessary equipment for the use of propane gas as fuel. This equipment was purchased from, and installed by Teton. It included a new one thousand gallon liquid gas tank owned by Teton and leased to the plaintiff. Into this tank Teton placed three hundred gallons of liquid propane gas which had been purchased from Stanolind through Mc-Hade, and connected it to the appliances. Shortly thereafter the water heater failed to function properly and an employee of Teton came to the premises to determine the cause. Upon entry into *268 the basement of the building, there being no odor of escaping gas, the employee lit a match for the purpose of checking the water heater. An explosion followed immediately, causing the injuries of which plaintiff complains. The court found that Teton was negligent in the installation of the system, which permitted gas to escape, and committed other acts of negligence which caused the explosion. It is conceded here that these findings are supported by substantial evidence.

The liquid propane gas produced by Stanolind was odorless unless an odorizing ingredient were added. The purpose of an odorant is to provide a stench which will give warning of a dangerous condition to those who may come into contact with escaping gas. When McHade accepted delivery of the product in its trucks at the Colorado refinery, delivery tickets were prepared and signed by Stanolind’s loader and McHade’s truck driver. These tickets showed the amount of liquid propane gas placed in the truck tanks and the quantity and kind of odorant which had been added to it. The court found that the propane in question had been adequately odorized with a proper odorant when delivered to McHade. Clearly this finding is sustained by the evidence, and there was no evidence of lack of odor at any time prior to the delivery of the gas into the tank on plaintiff’s premises. The import of this finding is that the defendants were not negligent in marketing a product which was inherently dangerous to human safety.

This finding would ordinarily dispose of the ease upon • the question presented on the former appeal. However, there has been injected into the 'case another issue which arose’from defendants’ evidence and was considered by the trial court. The evidence discloses that when liquid propane gas is placed in new steel tanks or conducted through new steel pipes, a chemical reaction will take place which destroys the type of odorant (isopropyl mercaptan) used by Stanolind. The trial court found that the odor of the gas in question was destroyed by a chemical reaction in the new tank, combined with the presence of a substance known as methanol, negligently left in the tank by Teton after purging the tank, 4 5 and that when the gas escaped into plaintiff’s building, it was odorless. The plaintiff contends that in addition to the duty to properly odorize the propane gas, the law imposes a duty upon the defendants to warn McHade upon the delivery of the product that the odor would be destroyed if placed in new steel containers. The essence of plaintiff’s contention is that the defendants owed a duty to warn their purchasers of the peculiar characteristics of the product, and how certain methods of handling it, which they might foresee, would make it inherently dangerous, and that this duty was continuous and a failure to fulfill that duty was a proximate cause of the explosion. Relying upon evidence that McHade and Teton knew of the dangerous character of liquid propane gas, that for many years they had operated an extensive business of retailing it and installing hundreds of new facilities for its use, 3 and that information concerning the chemical reaction which would *269 take place in new steel tanks destroying the odor was contained in many of the trade publications which were read by or were available to the purchasers, the trial court found that the purchasers knew, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known, that such chemical reaction was likely to occur. In addition Teton knew that it was necessary to purge the new tank before putting liquid propane into it for commercial use. In performing this purging process, it used ten pints of methanol.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 F.2d 265, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-a-parkinson-v-the-california-company-a-corporation-and-ca10-1958.