Selby v. Osage Torpedo Co.

1925 OK 352, 241 P. 130, 112 Okla. 303, 44 A.L.R. 120, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 5, 1925
Docket14733
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1925 OK 352 (Selby v. Osage Torpedo Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Selby v. Osage Torpedo Co., 1925 OK 352, 241 P. 130, 112 Okla. 303, 44 A.L.R. 120, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 616 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment of the district court sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and denying any relief asked for.

Plaintiff was a minor and brought hen action against the defendant by next friend. She alleged in her petition that the defendant was a corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing, transporting, and delivering nitroglycerine, torpedoes, and other high explosives, in Osage county; that on or about September 19, 1919, defendant’s employe, while in its employ driving a torpedo wagon from the factory loaded with nitroglycerine, belonging to the defendant, and while driving along a road in said county, in a negligent and fast manner over rough roads, the nitroglycerine exploded, as a result of the negligent and fast driving over the rough road; that said explosion injured the plaintiff toy burning her about the head and face and eyes; that her face became swollen and closed her eyes; that her eyes were made weak, causing her to lose a year in school; that her eyesight was still bad; that her nervous system was shockea and she suffered from said shock and had not recovered from the same — for all of Which she asked damages. The defendant’s answer consisted of a general denial, after admitting its corporate existence and being in the “nitroglycerine business.” On March 15, 1923, the 'cause was tried to a jury and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence the defendant demurred to the same, which was by the court sustained, and judgment was given the defendant, and plaintiff appealed by. petition in. error and case-made, urging two assignments of error as follows:

(1) “The court erred in refusing to permit the witness O. C. Martin to answer the question; From your experience Hint you have received from books and your kn nvl-edga of experiments made by you and from your observation of experiments made by other persons with nitroglycerine, can you state what will cause iit to explode?”
(2). “That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence.”

I. There was no dispute as to the fact of the explosion and the time and place of its occurrence. It was the contention of the plaintiff that the nitroglycerine exploded from the jolt of the truck in being run rapidly into a gully or swag across the road, which was about 8 inches deep and 18 inches wide. The defendant contended, as shown by counsel’s opening statement, that the swag across the road into which the truck ran was over 'a high power gas pipe line and there was a leak of gas at that point, and that a spark from the truck engine ignited the gas and set the nitroglycerine off. The evidence tended to show that the driver of the truck was driving and traveling at about 25 to 35 miles an hour at the time of the explosion; that the truck was loaded with about 250 quarts of the nitroglycerine; that the ditch was across the road as above described; that the gas pipe line was under the ditch but not exposed. Plaintiff undertook to prove that the cause of the explosion was the jolt when the truck struck the ditch, by showing that such was the nature of nitroglycerine that it was subject to be exploded in this manner, and for this purpose the witness, C. O. Martin, was called and questioned as follows:

“Q. What experience have you had in handling nitroglycerine? A. In handling nitroglycerine itself, I have had no experience in handling nitroglycerine itself, the only thing is my knowledge of nitroglycerine, the chemistry of nitroglycerine. Q. Gained from what? A.- From text-books in chemistry and study in the colleges that I have graduated from and the instruction that I have given in chemistry and the instructions-that we got from the wholesale drug, housd in the drug store. We have our instructions as to how to handle it and take care of it by handling the crude product, I have never handled it and never eared to. Q. From your instructions that you have received from the books and from your knowledge of experiments made by you and from your experience of experiments made by other persons with nitroglycerine, can you state what will cause nitroglycerine to explode? Mr. McCoy: To which the defendant objects for the reason that the witness is not qualified, incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial and calling for a conclusion of the witness, and for the further reason that the witness has shown by his answer that he has never handled nor had experience with nor studied thel kind, of nitroglycerine involved in the present controversy, but had only handled diluted commercial nitroglycerine used in the drug business. The C( urt: Sustained Mr. Roberts: Exception. That’s all.”

Prior to these questions and answers the witness had stated that he was a graduate *305 of the St. Louis School of Pharmacy, took an extra year in chemistry, and was registered in Texas, Missouri, and Oklahoma by •examination; that he taught senior pharmacy in the University for two years and had chemistry to that extent. He stated further that he knew how nitroglycerine was made, and its general properties as outlined by the text-books.

We think the testimony of the witness was sufficient to -show his knowledge of the science of nitroglycerine and qualified him to answer the question asked as to what would explode it.

C. J., volume 22, page 520, note a, lays down the rule as follows:

“It is usually considered not necessary, in order to qualify as a skilled witness one who has the necessary professional, scientific, or technical training, that he should ever have had much, or indeed any opportunity, in his own experience, to test the accuracy of his judgment.”

This rule is supported by citations- from the courts of nearly all the states in the Union.

In the case of Bradford Glycerine Co. v. Kizer, 113 Fed. 894, the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Ohio states the rule as follows:

“A professor of chemistry, otherwise qualified as an .expert net disqualified lrom giving his opinion as to the cause of an explosion of nitroglycerine, in answer to a hypothetical question, by the fact that he has had no practical experience in its manufacture.”

See, also, the following cases: The Congress & Empire Spring Co. v. Ann P. Edgar, 99 U. S. 643-658, 25 L. Ed. 487; Scott v. Astoria R. R. Co. (Ore.) 72 Pac. 594; German Life Ins. Co. v. Rosslewin (Colo.) 51 Pac. 488; Great Western Coal & Coke Co. v. Malone, 39 Okla. 693, 136 Pac. 403.

2. The next contention is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence. The record discloses that counsel for defendant, in his opening statement to the jury, admitted that the driver of the torpedo wagon was the driver of the defendant, in saying “our driver was not driving fast”; also admitted the fact of fihe explosion, and contended that it was caused by sparks from the car muffler coming in contact with the leak of gas from the 16-inch high pressure gas line under the swag in the road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 352, 241 P. 130, 112 Okla. 303, 44 A.L.R. 120, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/selby-v-osage-torpedo-co-okla-1925.