Spencer v. Holt

1921 OK 300, 200 P. 187, 82 Okla. 280, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 26, 1921
Docket10293
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1921 OK 300 (Spencer v. Holt) 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
Spencer v. Holt, 1921 OK 300, 200 P. 187, 82 Okla. 280, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 269 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

On the 22nd day of November, 1915, Delbert Holt, as plaintiff, commenced an action against Thad Spencer, Herbert ‘Spencer, Seldon J. Spencer, Lillian Wise, and Denton Spencer, as administrator of the estate of Wlilbur Spencer, deceased, and the Peery Oil & Gas Company, a corporation, as defendants, to recover the sum of $35,918.90 damages for personal injuries, iwhich injuries the plaintiff alleged he received by reason of the wrongful acts of the defendants in selling the plaintiff certain highly explosive oil or gasoline in lieu of coal oil as called for by one of the associates of the plaintiff, who, in said act of purchase, was acting for and on behalf of plaintiff and his associates.

The cause was tried to the court and jury and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,000, upon which judgment was rendered, and to reverse which judgment this proceeding in error has been regularly commenced. For convenience the parties will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff and defendants, respectively, as they appeared in the trial court.

At the close of the trial the court sustained a demurrer of the defendant Peery Oil & Gas Company to the evidence of the plaintiff, and thereby said defendant passed out of the case and is not a party to this appeal.

The other defendants, appealing, make numerous specifications of error, 14 in all. Concerning these specifications of error and *281 the issues involved, counsel for the defendants say in their brief:

“The theory upon which the defendant in error tried his case in the court below is founded upon two grounds, or separate bases of liability. First: He sued upon what we shall term! the statutory liability of a dealer In oil for failing to have oil inspected which was sold by him, or rather selling of which had not been inspected according to the inspection laws of the-state of Oklahoma, and that he sold oil which was an outlaw product and which had been rejected by the oil inspector department of the state of Oklahoma. Second: That the plaintiff in error, as a retail merchant, sold to the defendant in error, or his companions, oil which was below the standard required by the oil inspector of the state, and after taking said oil to their camp and trying the same, they noticed sofne suspicious actions of the oil and returned it to the merchant and complained to him that it was not kerosene or coal oil suitable for illuminating purposes, and requested him to take said oil back, which he refused to do, and expressly warranted that the oil which he had sold to them was a high grade of petroleum or kerosene oil.
“In other words, the first theory is that the ■ plaintiffs in error violated the statutes by selling uninspected oil, and the second theory is that they are liable as vendors of a dangerous instrumentality, and that notice of the dangerous character thereof had been brought home to them and that they refused or failed to take such steps 10-r precautions as an ordinarily prudent and careful merchant would, take under like circumstances.
“These are the two theories upon which the amended and substituted petition of the defendant in error are founded, and upon which the trial court in part instructed the jury and upon which the case was tried below. The said defendant in error also pleaded in his amended substituted petition that the sale of this oil to the plaintiff, or to his companions, was the conjoint and concurrent act of the wholesaler or distributor, F. T. Peery, doing business as the Peery Oil. Gas Company, and the defendants Spencer and Wise.
“The principal objections to the action of the trial court and its rulings on the trial may be grouped together under four distinct and separate grounds, viz., the overruling of the motion for new trial, the overruling of the demurrer to the evidence, and the giving of erroneous instructions not applicable to the issues as framed by the pleading and upon which proof was offered, and fourth, that the judgment of the court is contrary to the evidence and there is no evidence to support said judgment.”

These propositions of the defendants will be considered together. The evidence-shows that plaintiff and several boys had established a tent camp on the banks of the Cimarron river near Yale, Oklahoma, a short time prior to the explosion, and were living there and working there during the winter months of 1914-1915. That théy had two tents, one cook tent, in which there was a cook stove, and one sleeping tent, in which there was a heating stove. The wood was scarce and they did not always build a fire in the sleeping tent by reason of the scarcity of wood and by reason of their being out to work early and back from work late, and being tired and going immediately to bed. That most of the boys lived at Slackburn, and would go and come from Blackburn to ’their camp; sometimes all were in camp, sometimes only a few. That they elected one Henson as a shopper for the whole crowd, and that supplies were purchased by him after lists were made up and money paid to him by the several members of this camp. That a few days prior to February 5, 1915, Henson and some of the other boys, not including the plaintiff, however, went to Spencer’s store in Yale to buy a general bill of groceries and supplies; that, among other thing®, they ordered a can or two of coal oil; that the fluid smelled like gasoline; that upon the assembling of the order in the middle of the floor, Henson or some other one of the party remarked that they had ordered coal oil and the clerk said: “That is' coal oil,” and a member of the party said. “All right, but it smells like gasoline.” That the boys had no other oil in the camp at that time, except perhaps a little in some of the lanterns ; that the can or cans purchased were not labeled or tagged; that some of these refilled or finished filling their lanterns with this new purchase of oil, and that their lanterns sputtered and flashed and they became further doubtful as to the quality of the oil which had been delivered to them. That plaintiff did not know of the peculiar smell of the oil or the peculiar action of the lanterns. That the next day or the second day after, some of the party carried the oil back to the store and protested • again that it was not coal oil; that the clerk in the store, assuring them it was coal oil, went with them into the back yard, and there on a cold winter day poured some of the oil on the ground and struck a match to the oil on the ground, and that the same caught fire and burned up readily.

The evidence further shows that upon being thus reassured the boys carried the oil •back to camp; the plaintiff knowing nothing about the oil being carried back to the store: that on the evening of February 4, 1915, the plaintiff started to build k fire *282

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 300, 200 P. 187, 82 Okla. 280, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-holt-okla-1921.