Rogalski v. Phillips Petroleum Co.

282 P.2d 304, 3 Utah 2d 203, 1955 Utah LEXIS 131
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1955
Docket7982
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 282 P.2d 304 (Rogalski v. Phillips Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogalski v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 282 P.2d 304, 3 Utah 2d 203, 1955 Utah LEXIS 131 (Utah 1955).

Opinion

McDONOUGH, Chief Justice.

Appeal from a judgment on a verdict for plaintiff awarding damages for personal injuries sustained while on the property of defendant, Phillips Petroleum Company.

At the time he was injured, plaintiff was engaged in steam cleaning a truck owned and operated by his employer, Parley Drou-bay, a “distributing agent” of defendant’s products, on a concrete platform maintained by the defendant to clean its own trucks. Plaintiff stumbled into a vat of caustic soda, which was within two inches of the platform, used by defendant for cleaning by immersion certain truck parts. Although the vat stood 13 or 14 inches in height above the level of the ramp, plaintiff testified that he did not see it when he drove on to the platform because he was intent on placing the truck in the right position for cleaning and he further testified that he was unable to see it later because the steam cleaning equipment produced a great deal of vapor, obscuring his vision. The relationship of plaintiff’s employer to the company is defined by the evidence as that of lessee of a part of the defendant’s property, the holder of a right-of-way as to another portion, and a purchaser of defendant’s products, which were delivered to him on another part of defendant’s property where the pumps and docks are located. The place where the accident occurred is not within any of these particular areas where business is customarily transacted between Droubay and officials of the company, but there is ample evidence of the company’s acquiescence in Droubay’s use of the steam *206 cleaning equipment. The case was submitted to the jury on the theory that plaintiff could not recover unless the jury found him to be a business visitor upon the premises.

Appellant complains that its theory of the case, i. e. that plaintiff was a trespasser or, at most, a bare licensee, was not presented to the jury in the instructions. Instruction No. S concludes:

“If you' find from the evidence that the defendant was not negligent, or that the plaintiff was not a business invitee of defendant, or that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, as that term- is elsewhere herein defined for you, then your verdict shall be for the defendant no cause of action.’ (Emphasis added)

This instruction states a proposition which is too broad to conform with the holdings of this court. In Martin v. Jones, Utah, 253 P.2d 359, one who was -a trespasser, seen by defendant in proximity to a known artificial danger, was allowed to recover for injuries received upon defendant’s property. However, here the greater burden of proving himself a business invitee was placed upon the plaintiff and he was so found by the jury. Therefore, if the elements necessary to prove the relationship were set forth in other instructions and ■there was competent evidence from which the jury could draw the conclusion that he was a business invitee, it was unnecessary, from the defendant’s point of view, to give instructions as to the duty 'owed to a trespasser or licensee.

The facts of the relationship between plaintiff’s employer and th,e Phillips Company are disputed only in a few details. Droubay leased a part of the property owned by the company and he was a distributing agent of the company, thus necessitating that he enter the area of the fuel pumps in order to fill his tank trucks. Certainly, as to these portions of the property, he and his employees were business invitees, regardless of an express invitation to enter the property, for the law will imply an invitation where the purpose of such entrance is connected with business dealings between such person and the occupier of the land. Restatement of Torts, Sec. 332. Further, where the evidence of consent to enter that place where the accident occurred is uncontroverted and the presence of the plaintiff is beneficial to the owner and in pursuance of the object of the original invitation, the invitation extends to that portion as a matter of law. Hayward v. Downing, 112 Utah 508, 189 P.2d 442. But the facts of this case do not fall within the rule of Hayward v. Downing since the presence of the plaintiff upon the cleaning platform was not for the purposes of the original invitation, the 'execution or performance of the lease or the buying and selling of petroleum products.

The extent of the invitation, in cases such as this, has been held to be a question of fact for the jury to decide, Martin v. Food *207 Machinery Corp., 100 Cal.App.2d 244, 247, 223 P.2d 293; in other words, it is for the jury to determine whether a person in plaintiffs position would believe under the circumstances that the occupier of the property desired him to enter that portion of the property. It is true that Droubay, plaintiff’s witness, through whom the invitation; if any, was extended, testified that he considered the use of the ramp as a “neighborly accommodation” on the part of the defendant ; but plaintiff was not bound by this tes-; timoñy and the jury, apprised of his relationship with the company, was at liberty to consider his testimony in the light of other evidence produced.

Instruction No. 10 reads':

“In determining the question of whether the plaintiff was a .business visitor on the property of defendant and particularly that portion of defendant’s property consisting of the concrete truck washing ramp and vicinity, you must consider the issue of whether the plaintiff , had permission to enter thereon.
“In this connection, you are advised that the permission to enter onto the defendant’s property does not'need to he an express permission. It may consist of an implied permission, inferred from a course of conduct or acquiescence on the part of the defendant, its agents or employees. If you find, therefore, from a preponderance of the -evidence that Earley Droubay. and his. employees had washed trucks on the concrete washing platform for a period of time prior to plaintiff’s injury, and that neither the defendant or its employees had objected to such an operation, but had permitted and acquiesced in it, and that such washing of trucks was to the mutual business advantage of both the defendant and Droubay, then you may find from such evidence that the plaintiff occupied the status of a business visitor in going on the platform and washing a truck at the time of his injury.”

The jury had before it evidence from which it could conclude that certain benefits would be received by the Phillips Company by the entrance of Droubay upon the washing ramp: the Droubay trucks bore the colors and insignia of Phillips and hence it was to the company’s advantage to have those trucks appear clean; the company is interested in maintaining the good will of that agent; the savings in operation cost to the agent through the use of the company’s facilities might redound to the company’s benefit by reason of its distributor’s financial health. The jury further heard evidence pertaining to the long-continued use of the cleaning appliances by Droubay and both actual permission and tacit acquiescence.- If the jury had found from a preponderance of the-evidence that Rogal-ski did not meet the test set forth in Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
282 P.2d 304, 3 Utah 2d 203, 1955 Utah LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogalski-v-phillips-petroleum-co-utah-1955.