Thonnesen v. Montgomery Ward & Co.

33 F. Supp. 81, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1739
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 17, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 F. Supp. 81 (Thonnesen v. Montgomery Ward & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thonnesen v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 33 F. Supp. 81, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1739 (E.D.N.Y. 1939).

Opinion

INCH, District Judge.

This is a motion to dismiss the complaint made at the close of plaintiff’s case and renewed at the close of the trial.

Decision was reserved until a verdict, if any, of the jury.

The jury disagreed and were duly discharged. Thereupon the court after exchange of briefs heard the motion.

While there are several plaintiffs, and several identical motions, I shall hereafter refer to all as one motion.

Defendant moved to dismiss on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to make out a cause of negligence on the part of defendant' in the manufacture and sale of a kerosene oil burning heater, had failed to prove any inherent defect in the stove, and had failed to make out any cause of negligence in the servicing of the burner.

This court reserved decision, as above stated, because it felt, during the trial, that there might be substantial merit in such a motion, but desired first to have, if possible, a verdict from the jury, and thereafter ample time for a careful consideration by counsel, as well as the court, of such an important step in the case.

This is the third trial of these suits. The first trial occurred in January, 1938, before Judge Abruzzo and a jury. It consumed a number of days and in spite of a careful charge by the judge, the jury disagreed, were discharged and the action replaced on the trial calendar of the court. The second trial came on to be tried in February, 1938, before Judge Campbell and a jury. Again a long trial took place and once more the jury was charged with a most careful charge, but the jury disagreed and were duly discharged. On May 19, 1939, the action again appeared for trial, this time by different trial counsel and apparently with a different expert for plaintiff. This trial consumed a number of days with the result however that again the jury disagreed, were duly discharged. If this motion is not sound the case will again have to be tried.

On three occasions therefore, with able counsel for plaintiff conducting each of the trials and with various theories presented by various experts for plaintiff, no verdict for plaintiff has been secured.

Counsel for plaintiff correctly states that on such a motion as this, plaintiff is entitled to the most favorable inferences deducible from the evidence and all disputed facts are to be treated as established in their favor. It is only where, as a matter of law, there was no evidence sufficient to submit to the jury that this court can thus terminate the actions instead of again placing the issues on the trial calendar for another trial.

The undisputed facts are that on or about October 18, 1936, pursuant to an advertisement in a daily newspaper, Mrs. Walter Thonnesen purchased two cabinet oil heater stoves at the Jamaica store of the defendant. They were duly delivered and one was placed in the upstairs apartment of Walter and Helen, his wife, and the other in the downstairs apartment of his mother, Inga Thonnesen, and her daughter Ida. The house was located at 117 Gain Court, Gerritsen Beach, N. Y. It was formerly a one-family house, wooden bungalow type. There was no cellar. The only means of heating same was the kitchen coal stove and these two cabinet kerosene oil heaters located as [83]*83above. When Walter had -married the upper floor was made into an apartment for himself, his wife and baby, while his mother and sister continued to live in the lower floor. The house belonged to Mrs. Inga Thonnesen.

We are not concerned with the cabinet oil heater in Walter’s apartment as plaintiff’s proof shows that this stove “was all right” according to the testimony of both Ida and Walter. When the service man from defendant, Montgomery Ward & Company, subsequently appeared, as will be referred to later, he was told it was not necessary to go upstairs to see it.

About a month after the stoves had been installed and on or about November 22, 1936, Walter’s wife wrote the defendant requesting that a service man be sent as they had been having trouble with the “stoves”, that “they” had not worked right. Accordingly, about a week later, a service man, Mr. Kramer, was sent to the house, received by the mother, and informed that the stove upstairs had ceased to cause any trouble, but that the stove in the living room downstairs was not functioning properly. Mr. Kramer thereupon inspected the stove in question and I shall hereafter refer, by necessity in detail, to his testimony, as it is on what he did that counsel for plaintiff now rests his case.

On the argument of the motion counsel for plaintiff stated that they no longer relied on the allegations that the stove was inherently defective and dangerous as sold by defendant, but continued to claim that the defendant through Kramer negligently made repairs to the stove and as a direct result of this negligence of Kramer the disaster occurred.

The following extracts from plaintiff’s briefs confirm this position:

“The accident was caused solely by the defective repairs, by the defendant’s agent, to the stove in issue. These repairs caused the fire which in turn caused the damage sustained by the plaintiffs”. (Page 15, Plaintiffs’ Brief).
“Plaintiffs’ theory for the cause of the fire is that the repairs made by the defendant’s agent were negligently and improperly made”. (Plaintiff’s Reply Brief, Page 1).
“Defendant’s improper repair was the cause and the proximate cause of the injury”. (Plaintiff’s Reply Brief, Page 25).

As a matter of law no adequate proof was offered by plaintiff that there was a specific defect in the stove when sold and delivered which ordinary care on the part of defendant would have discovered. The defendant did not manufacture the stove but was merely the vendor thereof, it was one of thousands ^manufactured by the United Stove Company of Ypsilanti, Michigan, and it was known as the Sunshine Heater. . It was intended, as advertised, to burn common kerosene oil. It was a compact heater of attractive appearance suitable for a living room, having two burners with metal chimneys and a small tank on its back which contained the kerosene which operated to feed the burners by gravity.

I shall assume for the purpose of this motion only that the stove offered at the trial by plaintiff was the stove in question. This being so there is no evidence that the stove exploded, for its appearance was entirely inconsistent with any such theory. The loud noise, therefore, testified to by several witnesses cannot be traced to any such cause.

Considering therefore the real cause of complaint now made by plaintiff which relates to alleged negligence of Kramer, the service man, it appears that this stove was used off and on, after his visit, during the following month of December, with its occasional cold days. There is testimony that it smelt of kerosene, that it caused some soot, but so far as plaintiff’s proof goes, it continued to be used without the slightest evidence of any such danger as is now claimed.

On December 22, 1936, a month after Kramer’s visit, the stove was placed “catercorner” in a corner of the living room, near a window, on which lace curtains hung down to the sill, and a short distance from the wooden paneled wall of the room, there being room to walk around it if necessary. That afternoon Walter lit the stove about three or four o’clock and went upstairs again to go to sleep as he worked at night. He did not put the stove out.

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Related

General Motors Corporation v. Johnson
137 F.2d 320 (Fourth Circuit, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 F. Supp. 81, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thonnesen-v-montgomery-ward-co-nyed-1939.