Sistrunk v. Texas Holding Co.

264 P. 259, 88 Cal. App. 698, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 289
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6176.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 264 P. 259 (Sistrunk v. Texas Holding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sistrunk v. Texas Holding Co., 264 P. 259, 88 Cal. App. 698, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 289 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

-This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiffs, following verdict of a jury. Included in the appeal is the order of the court below denying appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The action is to recover damages resulting from injuries sustained by plaintiff Sistrunk through the alleged negligence of defendant. The plaintiffs Shaffer and Best are the employers of plaintiff Sistrunk and joined with him as such. No question is presented as to the rights of the employers in the event it is concluded that the employee is entitled to recover. Therefore, for the purposes hereof, the case will be treated as though the action had been commenced and prosecuted by the plaintiff Sistrunk alone.

The facts necessary to the determination of the questions presented are in the main undisputed. However, in outlining the case as made we do not mean that all of the facts stated are admitted. Our statement here necessarily takes as established the facts, sufficiently supported by evidence, which sustain the verdict, disregarding any conflict.

The plaintiff Sistrunk on February 24, 1923, was employed as a truck driver, engaged at his employment near Huntington Beach in Los Angeles County. About 8 o’clock P. M. of that date, after having delivered a load of pipe, he had withdrawn from the place of delivery and was with his trucks upon a public street or highway known as Crystal Avenue, in Huntington Beach. Suddenly without warning an explosion occurred, accompanied with flames of burning oil, enveloping the immediate vicinity. Before Sistrunk could remove himself his clothing took fire and he sustained the injuries here complained of.

*700 At this point it becomes necessary to outline to some extent the general situation with reference to the territory named. The Huntington Beach oil field is located on subdivided into town lots. The leases are small and wells are numerous and close together. The property of was and is surrounded by other leases, wells, and drilling outfits owned and operated by persons and other than the defendant. The area of each lease was approximately 300 feet by 145 feet, and some smaller. In the one city block here concerned there were operating five oil leases on one side of the street and three explorations on the other side.

The Texas Holding Company .operated three of the leases, though here we are concerned with but one, and hereafter such reference as may be made to the property of that company will be exclusive of all but the one, namely, the one adjoining what is called hereinafter the Moore lease. The Moore lease is another town-lot oil well and immediately adjoins the property of defendant on the north.

On the property of defendant Texas Holding Company at a point some thirty feet south of the Moore lease there had been erected and were standing at the times here in point two large oil tanks and also an open sump. There was oil in both the sump and the tanks, and the oil in the tanks either had been or was being heated at the time. Further the evidence disclosed the premises of defendant to have been maintained in a careless manner,' with rubbish, old lumber, waste, etc., scattered about. In addition, the ground around the tanks and sump was oil-saturated, and here and there near the highway were formed small pools of oil lying on the surface.

Coming, then, to the night in question it is in evidence that there was an open fire on the Moore lease some fifty feet from the sump and tanks, and that this fire was wholly without the control of defendant Texas Holding Company and not on property owned by it. About 10:30 on that night the fire occurred, and the testimony of many witnesses is in accord to the effect that there was a sudden flare of light and an almost instantaneous explosion, followed by fire in all directions. The explosion occurred upon premises; the fire started on defendant’s premises; the oil was seen by several of the witnesses to have run directly *701 from the tanks in question, which were being maintained upon defendant’s land, across the road and on to and under the truck in which plaintiff was sitting and which truck was then on the public highway. The testimony further shows that oil was thrown by the explosion from the tanks of defendant into the adjoining street, setting fire to the clothing of plaintiff as aforesaid.

As indicated hereinbefore, a conflict exists as to just where the fire started, and as to just how long afterward the explosion resulted. However, there is abundant testimony establishing the fact that the fire started right at or between' the tanks and that the fire and explosion were practically simultaneous.

On this state of facts appellant contends: (1) That the verdict and judgment stand unsupported by the evidence; (2) That the verdict is contrary to the evidence and the law; (3) That the court erred in giving certain instructions to the jury; (4) That the court erred in refusing to give certain instructions requested by defendant.

(1) The testimony taken as a whole shows that the defendant’s oil-storage tanks were maintained in close proximity to the boundary line'of defendant’s premises and immediately adjoining a public highway on which plaintiff’s trucks were standing; that there wras also maintained on property a large open sump next to the storage tanks and directly opposite and within a short distance of an open fire on the Moore property; that the storage tanks and sump contained quantities of crude petroleum, and that the manholes of these storage tanks were uncovered. Also the evidence disclosed that crude petroleum when exposed to the air emits quantities of gas explosive in character. It was shown further that the night in question was foggy, with a wind velocity of about twelve miles per hour, and that a fog tends to hold gas close to the ground, and that such gas will travel with the wind. It is further disclosed by the record that the fire and explosion took place first upon the premises of defendant and that the spread of this fire caused the injuries to plaintiff.

We deem these facts ample to sustain the verdict. We content ourselves with thus stating the conclusion reached without citation at this place for the reason that all of the claims of appellant center around practically the same *702 theory, and as we progress with the discussion ample will support these first conclusions.

(2) The appellant claims the verdict is contrary to the evidence and the law. The basis of this contention appears to be that it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to have evidence of what would have constituted the of ordinary care on the part of the defendant, and then to have shown wherein defendant fell short of such standard. Plaintiff in answer to this urges the of res ipsa loquitur. As this very same question is presented in the attack upon the instructions given on the subject we may pass this branch of the case for the moment and take up the questioned instructions.

(3) Error in giving instructions.

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Bluebook (online)
264 P. 259, 88 Cal. App. 698, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sistrunk-v-texas-holding-co-calctapp-1928.