Standard Oil Co. v. Payne

190 N.W. 769, 220 Mich. 663, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 959
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1922
DocketDocket No. 45
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 190 N.W. 769 (Standard Oil Co. v. Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Payne, 190 N.W. 769, 220 Mich. 663, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 959 (Mich. 1922).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

The plaintiff owns land in Grand Rapids on which it has operated a station for the distribution of its petroleum products for a number of years. On its southerly side it abuts on the right of way of the New York Central Railroad Company. The Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company, the predecessor in title of the New York Central, had constructed a side track about 900 feet in length on the northerly side of its right of way adjoining plaintiff’s land, which passed very close to the buildings thereon. On the morning of July 18, 1919, the defendant, then operating said railroad under the Federal control act and the orders made pursuant thereto, undertook to deliver to plaintiff upon this siding five tank cars loaded with gasoline. An empty car stood upon the siding. A switching engine, moving tender first, drew these cars westerly past the siding. The switch was then opened and the cars pushed into the siding and coupled to the box car. The cars were then drawn out on to the main track, the switch closed, the box car pushed past the point of the switch and left there. The tank cars were then pulled past the switch, the switch again opened and these cars again pushed into the siding to be placed or spotted for unloading. While the train crew were so engaged, they heard the sound of a train on the main track approaching from the west. The switch had been left open. The switch signal and the box car standing on the main track were in plain view of the approaching train for a distance of 1,100 [665]*665feet. The engineer of the switching crew endeavored to attract the attention of the engineer on the approaching train by sharp blasts of his whistle. It came along apparently without reducing its speed, entered the side track through the open switch, and crashed into the tender, locomotive and tank cars, causing a disastrous fire resulting in a loss to the admitted amount of $95,000, to recover which this action is brought. The defense is based on an agreement entered into between the Lake Shore- road and the plaintiff on September 8, 1911, under which exemption from liability is claimed. A printed blank prepared for use when a side track is to be put in on a shipper’s premises was used in its preparation. Inappropriate parts were stricken out, interlineations made, and words added. A plat of the ground showing .the location of the side track and plaintiff’s buildings, etc., adjacent thereto was attached. The railroad company agreed to maintain the track at its own expense and reserved the right to use it for other purposes when not occupied by cars which plaintiff was loading or unloading.

The paragraph relied on by defendant as a defense to this action reads as follows:

(The word in parentheses was stricken out of the printed form and the words in italics were inserted therein.)

“The second party will indemnify and save the first party harmless from—
“(a) All loss or damage by fire upon premises owned or occupied by second party arising from the operation of said track for benefit of second party, whether caused by the negligence of first party or otherwise, except such as may be caused to the first party’s property solely by its own negligence.
“(b) All other loss, damage or injury to persons or property on the premises of second party, by reason of said track, or the (construction), maintenance or operation thereof for benefit of second party, which [666]*666is not due to the sole negligence of the first party, its agent or employees.”

Under this contract the defendant is exempt from liability for—

“loss or damage by fire upon premises owned or occupied by second party (plaintiff) arising from the operation of said track for benefit of second party.”

Plaintiff insists that—

“a reasonable construction of this clause of this contract means this- — that the loss and damages must arise from some act that was being performed for the benefit of the plaintiff at the time, and that this act must be the cause of the fire and damage.”

Defendant’s counsel say:

“These words mean ‘having as a cause, without which the result would not have been produced, the operation of the side track.’ ”

The defendant had the right to use the side track for other purposes. The only operation of the track which could be for the benefit of plaintiff would be when locomotives and cars were being propelled thereon for the purpose of placing cars for loading and unloading and removing them thereafter. Any other use of the track by defendant would not be within the terms of the contractual provision. Defendant’s employees, the switching crew, caused the locomotive and tank cars to be placed on this siding on the morning of July 18th for the purpose of “spotting” them at plaintiff’s warehouse. They left the switch open. This use of the sidetrack was for the benefit of plaintiff. Ño damage was occasioned thereby. Along came the freight train on the main track. It had no occasion to enter the siding. It did; so enter, not for the purpose of using it for the benefit of plaintiff or for any purpose in furtherance of the business of either plaintiff or defendant, but because of the [667]*667negligence of its engineer in failing to observe that the switch was open, notwithstanding the switch signal and the presence of the box car in plain view on the main track. That his action in doing so was clearly negligent is not denied. His train collided with and wrecked the switching train. The fire followed as a direct result thereof. This negligent conduct of the engineer was therefore the proximate cause of the damage plaintiff sustained on account of the fire. Defendant’s counsel so concede in their reply brief:

“The loss was due, if is true, to the negligence of the defendant’s engineer on the freight train, but except for the use of the side track for the benefit of the plaintiff at the time, his act would not have caused the fire.”

Had there been no contract, the liability of the defendant would have been clearly established. Plaintiff’s counsel urge that the exemption from liability provided for in the contract does not relieve unless it appears that the use of the side track for plaintiff’s benefit was the proximate cause of the loss.

In 10 C. J. p. 125, it is said:

“Necessity That Excepted Cause be Proximate Cause — a. In General. Where the carrier relies on one of the exceptions to his common-law liability, it must appear, in order to excuse him, that the exceptional cause, such as an act of God, or the like, was the immediate or proximate, and not the remote, cause of the loss. And while it must be true, as a general proposition, that, although the carrier is in some way negligent, if such negligence does not contribute to the loss which is due to an excepted cause, the carrier is not liable, it is very generally declared that, if the negligence of the carrier concurs with an act of God in producing a loss or injury, the carrier is not exempted from liability by showing that the immediate cause was the act of God, or some other excepted cause; or, as otherwise expressed, the carrier is responsible where the loss is caused by an act [668]*668of God or other excepted cause, if the carrier’s negligence mingles with it as an active and co-operative cause.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 N.W. 769, 220 Mich. 663, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-payne-mich-1922.