Surman v. Ohio & Pennsylvania Oil & Gasoline Co.

89 Ohio Law. Abs. 33
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1962
DocketNo. 25365
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 Ohio Law. Abs. 33 (Surman v. Ohio & Pennsylvania Oil & Gasoline Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Surman v. Ohio & Pennsylvania Oil & Gasoline Co., 89 Ohio Law. Abs. 33 (Ohio Ct. App. 1962).

Opinions

Skene, J.

This appeal-pomes to this court on questions of law from a judgment for the defendants entered by direction of the court upon motion at- the conclusion of the presentation of plaintiff’s evidence. The .action is one seeking damages for the alleged acts of concurrent negligence of the defendants as set out in plaintiff’s third amended petition.

In the early evening of August 10, 1955, at about ten minutes after seven, P. M., the plaintiff was injured while in the G-ateway Restaurant in the Village of Andover, Ohio, when an explosion of great intensity occurred within the building whereby the building was destroyed by the force of the explosion and the fire that followed.

There were a number of other defendants served in this action as it was origi-nully filed, including the proprietors of the restaurant and the local, gas .company distributing natural gas to the people of Andover, the latter two,.-with others, which included the Sinclair Refining Company, being dismissed by a covenant not to sue upon settlement of the plaintiff’s claim as alleged, in ■ the third amended petition, the amount received totaling twelve hundred dollars to-this plaintiff. Other der. fend ants were dropped: out of. and not included in the second and third amended petitions. The defendants still- in the case upon • the filing of the third amended petition were the Standard Oil Company, the Village...of Andover, Herbert Swezey and Oren. Barnes, individually and doing -business as Swezey’s -Garage, a partnership - operating- a gasoline -station on the-opposite corner- of the Public Square-of the Village from the-restaurant (some'-four hundred and seventy-five feet, away), and the Ohio. [36]*36and Pennsylvania Oil and Gasoline Company, which company owned and operated a gasoline service station on the south side of the Public Square about three hundred seventy-five feet from the restaurant.

After setting out certain of the regulations for the manufacture, storage, handling, sale and transportation of petroleum products promulgated by the State Fire Marshal of Ohio (said to be in effect under the authority of Section 3737.17, Revised Code, the effective date not being shown by the evidence), the plaintiff alleges six claims of negligence as proximately causing his injuries against the defendant, the Ohio and Pennsylvania Oil and Gasoline Company, which are to the effect that it negligently permitted gasoline to spill and leak onto and into the ground and into the drains and sewers so as to constitute a nuisance; that it installed and maintained underground piping and tanks for the storage and delivery of gasoline without protecting such equipment against corrosion; that it failed to maintain such equipment as required by and in violation of Section 203.9 of the State Fire Marshal’s regulations and contrary to usage and custom of those engaged in such business so as to allow leakage to develop and to thus enter the drains and public sewers; that it failed to inspect and test such equipment to discover leaks before injury resulted; that it failed to detect undex*ground leaks by the exercise of reasonable care, and that it failed to warn the public and officials of Andover of the spilling and leakage of gasoline to permit the dangerous condition to be eliminated to prevent injury to others.

Like allegations are set out against the defendants Swezey and Barnes, individually and doing business as Swezey’s Garage and the Standard Oil Company, it being charged that these last named defendants were engaged in a joint enterprise and that they were themselves each careless and negligent through their servants and employees acting within the scope of their employment to the extent and in the manner charged. The claims of negligence against the Village of Andover are that it negligently maintained a sewer system without adequate ventilation so as to permit inflammable and explosive substances to accumulate in dangerous quantities and concentration: that it permitted the ventilation afforded to be decreased or eliminated [37]*37by paving over “pick holes;” that it failed to inspect and test said sewer to discover the accumulation of explosive and inflammable substances therein in time to warn the plaintiff of the dangers and to disperse or otherwise render harmless accumulated explosive and inflammable substances in said sewer, and that it failed to abate the nuisance created by the accumulation of inflammables and explosives in said sewer operation.

The defendant, the Village of Andover, filed its answer by which it denies all of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition. The remaining defendants, by separate answers, admit the capacity in which they are engaged in business and that there was an explosion in the Gateway Restaurant in Andover- on the evening of August 10, 1955, wherein the plaintiff received some injury but deny each and every other allegation as to them as set out in the petition and further allege the plaintiff’s settlement with other defendants dismissed from the case and the amounts paid by each to this plaintiff.

Therefore, the issue presented is whether or not there is any credible evidence to support the separate alleged acts of negligence as set out against each of these defendants proximately resulting or contributing to plaintiff’s injuries.

At the outset, consideration will be given to the question of whether or not the claims against the Village of Andover, insofar as they state a cause of action in the maintenance of its sewer systems, are supported by any credible evidence. The claims of negligence against this defendant have been stated above. The Supreme Court of Ohio has held that the duty of a municipal corporation in the maintenance of its sewers is a proprietary and not a governmental function. In the case of Doud v. Cincinnati, 152 Ohio St., 132, the court, in the third paragraph of the syllabus, said:

“3. Although a municipal corporation is not liable for damages growing out of a dangerous condition which suddenly arises in connection with the use or operation of its sewers until it has actual or constructive notice of such dangerous condition, yet, since the municipal corporation has a duty of inspection of its sewer as an instrumentality under its supervision and control, it becomes chargeable with notice of what reasonable inspection would disclose, including defects which may arise through the slow process of deterioration.”

[38]*38On page 137 of tlxe opinion, the court supported this para.graph of the syllabus by saying:

“The defendant seeks to escape liability on the ground that it had no notice of the defect in the sewer which caused the damage to plaintiff’s property. It is true that a municipality is not liable for damages growing out of a dangerous condition which suddenly arises in connection with the use or operation of its streets, sewers or other structures, until it has actual or constructive notice of such condition. * *

Some attempt has been made in argument, but not supported by credible evidence, that the onrush of the flood water caused by the sudden heavy rain storm caused gasoline to be forced into the restaurant through the sanitary sewer. Without some evidence that a proper inspection of its sewers by the village would have disclosed that gasoline in dangerous quantities had leaked into the sewer (such evidence being totally absent from the record) certainly any dangerous condition resulting entirely from the storm would not support a claim of negligence against the village under the authority of Doud v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 Ohio Law. Abs. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surman-v-ohio-pennsylvania-oil-gasoline-co-ohioctapp-1962.