Richardson & Holland, Inc. v. Owen

269 P. 838, 148 Wash. 583, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 620
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1928
DocketNos. 21233, 21232. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 269 P. 838 (Richardson & Holland, Inc. v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson & Holland, Inc. v. Owen, 269 P. 838, 148 Wash. 583, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 620 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

In these cases, the respondent corporation sought to recover damages resulting to -its property; and the individual respondent sought damages for personal injury, medical and hospital expenses sustained by him, by reason of a steam vessel, tank or boiler manufactured for the corporation by appellants, bursting.

*584 Both cases involve substantially the same questions of law and fact and were tried together. Separate findings of fact, conclusions and judgment were entered in each case; the cases were consolidated by stipulation and argued together on appeal. After trial to the court without a jury, findings, conclusions and a judgment in favor of the corporation were entered in the sum of $525. Findings, conclusions and a judgment in favor of the individual respondent were entered in the sum of $1,316, for personal injuries, medical, hospital and nurses expenses.

The trial judge having heard and considered all the eyidence, oral, documentary and real, and having inspected the plant and machinery involved in the cases, omitting formal and unassailed ones, entered the following findings'of fact:

“VI. That prior to November 14, 1924, plaintiff as president and general manager of Richardson & Holland, Inc., entered into negotiations with defendants which cuhninated in Richardson & Holland, Inc., ordering from defendants, and in defendants designing, manufacturing, and constructing, and on or about November 14, 1924, installing, on the third floor of the place of business of Richardson & Holland, Inc., at 518 First Avenue South, a glace fruit drier or dehydrator to be used by Richardson & Holland, Inc., for the purpose of drying fruits. That said glace fruit drier or dehydrator as designed, manufactured, and installed by defendants consisted of a sheet metal enclosed room approximately 9 feet long 4 feet wide and 6 feet high; inside of said room and on the south side thereof was erected a heating apparatus to be heated by steam conducted therein from the steam heating equipment in use in said building, the entrance of the steam into said heating apparatus being controlled by a valve thereon; said heating apparatus consisted of a tightly sealed hollow metal base, chamber or foundation approximately 42 inches long, 18 inches wide and 6 inches deep; from the top of said hollow chamber *585 there extended upward in an inverted ‘U’ shape, metal pipes each about 2 inches in diameter, the open ends of each pipe being’ securely fastened into the top of said hollow chamber; upon steam being conducted into said hollow chamber it would circulate through said pipes and thus create a high degree of heat, which by means of an electric fan placed on south side of said heating apparatus was caused to circulate throughout said metal enclosed room and upon, through and about fruits placed in wire baskets in said room for drying or dehydrating.
“VII. That the said heating apparatus designed, manufactured, and installed by defendants for use in said dehydrator was operated by steam from the boilers of the securities building, the owners of the building occupied by Eichardson & Holland, Inc.
“VTII. That a short time prior to September 2, 1925, the said heating apparatus in said dehydrator became out of order in that water and steam leaked from around the sides, ends and bottom thereof and that defendants were notified by plaintiff of said facts and were requested to repair said apparatus and for that purpose said heating apparatus was removed to defendants’ shops and repairs were made thereto by defendants, and that said apparatus was returned by defendants to the premises of Eichardson & Holland, Inc., and was installed and connected with the steam line from the boilers of Securities Building Company, as it had been installed and connected originally.
“IX. That on September 2,1925, for the first time after said repairs were made, said heating apparatus and said dehydrator were used for the purposes of drying fruits, and that while said heating apparatus and said dehydrator were being so used and were being used in the manner intended that they should be used, said heating apparatus exploded and burst and wrecked and damaged said heating apparatus and said dehydrator, and caused glass windows and other parts of said building to be damaged, and caused plaintiff to be severely burned and injured. That the pressure of the steam used in said heating apparatus at the time of, and Immediately prior to, said explosion was not to exceed fifty (50) pounds.
*586 “X. That at the time defendants undertook to design and manufacture said dehydrator and said heating apparatus, defendants represented to the plaintiff that they made a specialty of the manufacture of such apparatus; that defendants knew then and ever since have known that plaintiff and Richardson & Holland, Inc., had no knowledge pertaining to the construction of such apparatus, or what would be required to make such apparatus safe, or as to the manner or details of its design, manufacture, or construction, and that plaintiff and Richardson & Holland, Inc., were relying upon the superior knowledge, skill, and advice of defendants with respect thereto.
“XI. That at all times herein mentioned, defendants knew that the heating apparatus in said dehydrator would be operated by steam at a pressure of from forty (40) to fifty (50) pounds as an average, but that at times the pressure might be as high as seventy-five (75) pounds; that said heating apparatus would explode and burst if it were not so designed, manufactured and repaired that it would withstand the pressure of the steam used therein and that if said heating apparatus were not designed, manufactured and repaired in such a manner as to withstand the pressure of the steam used therein, it would become imminently dangerous and would burst and explode and would endanger the lives and safety of persons and property in the vicinity thereof.
“Xn. That the explosion or bursting of said heating apparatus on September 2, 1925, was caused by, and the proximate cause thereof, was, the carelessness and negligence of the defendants in improperly and defectively designing said heating apparatus for the purposes intended, in improperly and defectively manufacturing same, in improperly and defectively, welding same together, in improperly and defectively repairing same, in undertaking to fabricate together the flat sides, flat top, the ends and bottom plates of said apparatus by means of fusion welding instead of by the use of stays and stay bolts, and in doing* and performing the welding that was done in the manufacturing and repairing of said heating ap *587 paratus in a defective manner and in such a manner as to make said apparatus dangerous and unsafe and liable to explode if used at all for the purposes intended.
“XIII.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P. 838, 148 Wash. 583, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-holland-inc-v-owen-wash-1928.