Standard Oil Co. v. Henley

25 So. 2d 400, 199 Miss. 819, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 250
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1946
DocketNo. 35997.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 So. 2d 400 (Standard Oil Co. v. Henley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Oil Co. v. Henley, 25 So. 2d 400, 199 Miss. 819, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 250 (Mich. 1946).

Opinions

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

About six o ’clock on Saturday afternoon, July 17,1943, Willis W. Henley went to the Bailey Service Station in Crystal Springs, and presented to Bailey, the proprietor, a five gallon can, requesting that he fill it with kerosene. Bailey handed the can to Jones, á negro attendant who worked at the station only, on Saturday afternoons, and directed the attendant to draw the kerosene from, a kerosene container separately kept in a small storeroom by the side of the main station building, and both Henley and Bailey saw the negro go with the can to the kerosene storeroom, but Henley and Bailey then went on into the main office. The negro says that he filled the can with kerosene from the kerosene container and took it to the rear end of Henley’s car' and called to the others that it was there, and that before Henley came back.to the car he, Jones, had put the can in the rear or trunk end of the car.

When, according to his testimony, Henley returned to the car he locked the rear compartment with the can therein, and when he reached home he left the can locked in the car, but that about eight o’clock on Sunday night following he unlocked the car compartment, took the can therefrom, and placed it. in what in the record is called a junk room near the kitchen. About twenty or thirty minutes later Carrol’ Henley, the twelve-year-old son of Henley, saw that the kerosene lamp in the livingroom needed fuel, and says that he went to the junk room, where he says he had seen his father place the can, obtained a can, and, in the course of filling the lamp ail explosion occurred, as a result of which the eight-year-old daughter of Willis Henley, and the sister of the boy, was *825 so seriously burned that she died on the Wednesday following.

The can from which the boy was filling the lamp was found to contain gasoline instead of kerosene, and suit was brought against the Standard Oil Company and Bowen, its wholesale distributor, charging that without Bailey’s knowledge the defendants had placed gasoline instead of kerosene in the kerosene container at the service station. From a verdict and judgment upholding this charge the defendants appeal. Bailey was not sued, the case being tried on the theory that Bailey was not an agent of the defendants, and the court so instructed the jury, from which there is no cross-appeal.

To meet the charge against them that they placed ga'soline instead of kerosene in the service station kerosene container, the defendants showed as follows:

For more than four years all the gasoline handled by the ¡Standard Oil Company in this territory was colored red, while its kerosene was water white. Its bulk station at Crystal Springs has a separate storage tank, No. 3, for kerosene , which was regularly inspected and certified by state authorities. The deliveries by the oil company to the Bailey station were made by a tank truck which had a separate compartment No. 5 for kerosene, drawings from which were from a faucet into five gallon open pails.

On Wednesday, July 14, 1943, late in the evening Lancaster in charge of the tank truck, and the only person making deliveries 'for the defendants in that particular territory, loaded the kerosene compartment No. 5, then entirely empty, with 149% gallons of kerosene, its full capacity, taking the kerosene from bulk tank No. 3, and on Thursday morning, July 15, 1943, as his first delivery of kerosene he delivered to the Bailey Service Station 55 gallons, or 11 pails full, which he personally poured into the station kerosene container, witnessed by Bailey personally, and both testified that this delivery was of water white kerosene, as both could easily see, and did see as it was delivered by open pails. This was approximately *826 the capacity of the station kerosene container, and there was only one kerosene container at the Bailey station.

Lancaster’s deliveries of kerosene on that day were 110 gallons, and the next day he replenished the tank truck compartment No. 5 with 110 gallons of kerosene from hulk tank No. 3, and on Friday, July 16,1943, he delivered to Bailey 20 gallons of kerosene in the same manner and witnessed in the same manner as was the 55 gallons on the previous day.- There were no deliveries to Bailey on Saturday, hut on Thursday and Friday there had been six other deliveries from this truck tank compartment No. 5 to six other customers, including 40 gallons to a sister of plaintiff Willis Henley, and all these customers; except plaintiff’s sister who was not introduced by either party, testified that the deliveries made to them was kerosene.

' It was further shown that immediately, and only by a few minutes preceding the purchase by Henley at about six o’clock on Saturday afternoon, the 17th, Robert Yarborough purchased from the Bailey Station three gallons of kerosene, one gallon being in a glass jug, and with him was his tenant, Mack iStewart, for whom the gallon jug was purchased, and both testified that it was water white kerosene, and was obtained by the negro. Jones from the kerosene container in the kerosene storeroom. A pint of the liquid taken from this purchase by Yarborough was sent to a chemist, who testified that it was a good grade of kerosene with a safe flash point.

It was shown that the next purchase of kerosene at the Bailey Station immediately succeeding in a few moments that by Henley were by Forrest Phillips and his son Wilborn Phillips. The latter waited upon himself and personally drew the kerosene from the kerosene container in the kerosene store-room, the negro attendant being engaged for the present at something else, and both these witnesses were positive, both by sight and by the subsequent use of the fluid that it was kerosene and nothing else.

*827 It was further shown that the Bailey Service Station was closed throughout the day on Sunday, July 18th. Some time during the night, and within a few hours after the accident, a deputy sheriff, at the request of the Henley family went -to the Bailey Service Station, accompanied hy the city marshal, and by Brister, an employe of the service station, who unlocked the kerosene storage room, and they made an examination of the kerosene container and found that it contained only water white kerosene, in which connection it may be mentioned that the ■ city marshal had had considerable experience in the oil business and well knew how to tell the difference between kerosene and gasoline. The deputy, sheriff' was ill at the time of the trial, but the marshal and Brister testified to the above facts.

There was other and additional evidence in behalf, of the defendants, all to the same effect as the above, including the testimony of the negro attendant that he filled the Henley can from the kerosene container and that he knew it was kerosene. Most of these witnesses were friends of the Henleys and, except as to the negro Jones, no effort was made to discredit or impeach any of them.

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Bluebook (online)
25 So. 2d 400, 199 Miss. 819, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-henley-miss-1946.