Strand v. Everett

258 P. 115, 84 Cal. App. 358, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 437
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5053.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 258 P. 115 (Strand v. Everett) 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
Strand v. Everett, 258 P. 115, 84 Cal. App. 358, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 437 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

McLUCAS, J., pro tem.

Plaintiff brought suit to recover damages for personal injuries and property loss arising from the alleged negligence of defendant in overflowing plaintiff’s automobile tank at a gasoline filling station so that the automobile took fire, which caused the loss and injury. The trial court gave judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $240, and the plaintiff appeals from the judgment.

Plaintiff’s husband, A. A. Strand, testified that he drove the plaintiff’s automobile from Brawley and stopped at the service station of the defendant at Indio. At that time Tyler G. Duff was sitting in the front seat with Strand and to his right. Plaintiff was sitting on the right side, and Mrs. J..F. Warner on the left side of the rear seat of the automobile. Plaintiff’s husband got out of the automobile from the left side of the car and went to the right of the front seat and measured the contents of the gasoline tank, while Duff stood on the left side of the car near the front end, and the ladies remained in the rear seat of the automobile. That after measuring the contents of the gasoline tank he stated to Craig, the defendant’s employee who was in charge of the service station, “I want four gallons of *360 gasoline.” That he heard no further remark from Craig; that Craig inserted the end of the nozzle into the gasoline tank and began to pump; that shortly after the commencement of the pumping by Craig the tank overflowed, at which instant he shouted to Craig, “I said four gallons”; that Craig thereafter made a half turn of the pump and then said, “Oh, I forgot,” and at that instant the portion of the automobile near the gas tank broke out in flames. Duff testified that he stood near the left front fender and Strand measured the gas in the tank and said to Craig, “Four will be enough”; that Craig inserted the end of the hose into the gasoline tank and said, “Well, it will take five, then,” but that Strand made no reply; that Craig operated the pump, and he then heard Strand say, “Stop, you are giving me too much—I said four gallons”; that Craig then remarked, “I beg your pardon, I did not—,” and pulled the hose from the gasoline tank while it was running half capacity of the nozzle; that the hose was entirely away from the automobile when the flames broke out from the tank. Mrs. Warner testified that she heard Mr. Strand say, “I want four gallons. ’ ’ Mrs. Strand testified that she heard Strand say, 1 ‘ It will take four gallons, ’ ’ and that she did not hear Craig make any remark after Strand had ordered the four gallons of gasoline. V. W. Lockwood testified for the defense that he was at the service station of the defendant when the Chevrolet automobile was driven to the station by Strand; that he stood in the front door of the service station, while Craig went to the gasoline pump, a distance of about twenty feet; that he heard Strand say, “Look out, it is running over”; that at the same time he saw gasoline drip underneath the ear, and a few seconds later he saw a ball of fire drop from the engine pan, and then the car took fire; that he did not see any gasoline come out of the end of the hose when Craig threw it to one side; that Craig had stopped pumping when Strand said, “Look out, it is running over.” Craig, the defendant’s employee, testified that Strand was measuring the gasoline tank when he arrived at the automobile; that Strand withdrew the measuring stick from the tank, and, while looking at the stick, said, “Four gallons”; that he handed the hose to Strand, and said, “Well, it will take five more then, won’t it?” that Strand did not answer; that he then started the operation of the pump, which was set at *361 the five-gallon mark; that after he had completed the run of the pump and had stepped away from it to prepare to drain the hose, he heard Strand say, “It is running over,” and Strand immediately added, while holding up the nozzle, “I said four gallons”; that he replied, “I beg your pardon, I did not—”; and at that time the gasoline took fire.

It thus appears that the evidence was in sharp conflict as to whether Strand ordered four or five gallons of gas. The trial court’s findings were:

“III.
“That at the said time and place the said plaintiff gave said order for gasoline to plaintiff in a careless, indefinite, heedless, thoughtless and negligent manner, resulting in confusion and misunderstanding as to the amount of gasoline ordered; that plaintiff was careless and negligent in not responding to defendant’s inquiry of the amount of gasoline desired; that plaintiff was careless and negligent in not giving proper attention and care to the business then in hand of ordering gasoline for his automobile.
“IV.
“That at the said time and place, the said defendant negligently placed and attempted to place gasoline in the said automobile in excess of four (4) gallons, thereby causing the gasoline tank on said automobile to overflow and gasoline to be spilled on said automobile and the mechanism thereof, and said automobile shortly thereafter ignited and burned, demolishing and totally destroying said automobile and injuring plaintiff, Mrs. A. A. Strand. That the negligence of defendant was not wilful nor deliberate.
“XIII.
“That it is not true that the said plaintiff, Mrs. A. A. Strand and A. A. Strand, well knew at the time of the driving of the said automobile to the service station of said defendant that the said automobile and mechanism and machinery thereof was overheated and was extremely hot and in a dangerous condition in which to place gasoline or to permit the fumes and vapor of gasoline to come in contact therewith, and that it is not true that the said plaintiff, Mrs. A. A. Strand, or her agent, Mr. A. A. Strand, *362 carelessly and negligently drove said automobile to said service station in said dangerous condition.
“XIV.
“That it is true that whatever injuries and damages the said plaintiff, Mrs. A. A. Strand, sustained was consequent upon, due to and was proximately caused by the concurrent negligence and want of care of plaintiff’s agent, A. A. Strand, and defendant’s agent, E. E. Craig; that it is true that the negligence and carelessness of plaintiff contributed to and was concurrent in setting in motion the proximate and direct cause of the injuries and damage sustained by plaintiff; that the mutual carelessness and negligence of plaintiff and defendant was contemporaneous, concurrent, contributory and continuing down to the very moment of the injury; that the mutual negligence and carelessness of plaintiff and defendant constituted the proximate cause of the injuries and damages sustained by plaintiff and because of the concurrent negligence of plaintiff she is entitled only to nominal damages.
“XV.
“That it is not true that the said plaintiff, Mrs. A. A. Strand, her agents and the occupants of said automobile drove said automobile to said service station of defendant in an overheated, extremely hot and dangerous condition constituting contributory negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 115, 84 Cal. App. 358, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strand-v-everett-calctapp-1927.