Waddle v. Gammel

1956 OK 340, 305 P.2d 559, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 658
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 26, 1956
Docket37268
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1956 OK 340 (Waddle v. Gammel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waddle v. Gammel, 1956 OK 340, 305 P.2d 559, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 658 (Okla. 1956).

Opinion

HALLEY, Justice.

This action was filed in the District Court of McIntosh County by Austin Gammel against J. A. Waddle, d/b/a Waddle Butane Company, for property damages and personal injuries resulting from an explosion of a butane gas system on the premises of the plaintiff, which defendant had sold to and installed for the plaintiff at a residence and drive-in barbecue stand a few miles North of Eufaula. A nine-juror verdict was returned for the plaintiff in the sum of $5,000. Defendant has appealed from the judgment based thereon. We shall refer to the parties by name or as plaintiff and defendant as they appeared in the trial court.

J. A. Waddle operated a butane business in Okmulgee under the name of Waddle Butane Company where he sold butane equipment and accessories for its installation and use, and also maintained a subsidiary place of business in Eufaula at a filling station where he maintained a telephone, sold butane equipment and operated a truck for deliveries in that area. At the Eufaula station he kept a small stock of stoves and other -equipment and also a truck driver and a salesman named Hershal Salters who was authorized to sell equipment and accessories,. collect therefor and deposit the money in the bank, but was paid on a commission basis rather .- -than a salary, as was the truck driver. The defendant also .kept a set of plumbing tools at the Eufaula -station.

In the early part of 1950, Mr. -Salters sold to Austin Gammel a butane tank, pipe and other equipment and agreed that it would be installed as a “turn-key” job in a residence and drive-in stand to be operated by plaintiff a few miles North of Eufaula. J. A. Waddle emplpyed a licensed plumber, O. M. Gannis of Okmulgee, to make the installation. It appears that the plumber installed the tank and pipes and capped the pipes but did not attach the equipment, such as stoves, hot plates and water heater. .Gannis testified that he installed the tank and. butane lines properly, tested them and made the required report to the office of the State Fire Marshal,' whose representative approved the. installation. It developed that such approval was not given be *562 cause certain pipes were placed between outer and inner walls of the residence, but there was no complaint as to the installation in the barbecue drive-in.

There is evidence that Hershal Salters, who was not a plumber, made some connections of accessories to the pipes put in by the plumber. Some weeks after the installation Austin Gammel turned on the gas and lighted one of the burners the day before he was to open for business and found that there was a leak in the pipes in the drive-in. He notified Hershal Salters in Eufaula, who came out and in an effort to locate the trouble removed some boards to look under the drive-in floor. In order to see better, he struck a match which resulted in a violent explosion. Salters and Gammel were badly burned.

There is ample evidence to support the contention that the explosion occurred because of defective installation of a pipe or pipes in or under the drive-in. It is not denied that the plumber,. Gannis, was the agent and employee of the defendant, and acting within the scope of his employment when he installed the' equipment. It is not clear whether the leaking pipe was twisted with such force as to destroy the threads or break the pipe and allow the escape of butane, or whether the pipe was broken in moving the small-stand building and letting it down upon the pipe in such manner as to break it.

The defendant has raised three propositions in this appeal which are: (1) The trial court committed error in submitting the case' to the jury. (2) The trial court erred in refusing to give defendant’s requested instructions two and three, and erred in giving instructions seven and eight. (3) Error of the trial court in admitting certain testimony properly objected to by the defendant.

As to defendant’s first proposition the only question to be answered is was there sufficient evidence of negligence on the defendant’s part to go to the jury? We certainly think there was. The defendant, through his servant Gannis, installed the pipe or pipes for the butane under and in the drive-in. There was an explosion in which the plaintiff was injured. The defendant furnished the butane gas to be used by plaintiff. There was evidence that the pipe carrying the butane gas was improperly installed and was defective and was leaking. The explosion was the result of the defendant’s agent lighting a match after removing boards to look under the floor where there was a gas pipe. To us, this evidence was sufficient to justify the trial court in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence and his motion for directed verdict. We said in Wentz v. Grimshaw, Okl., 271 P.2d 728, that in an action at law triable to a jury that it was the duty of the trial court, when ruling upon a motion for directed verdict, to disregard all evidence unfavorable to plaintiff and give him benefit of all legitimate inferences, and where there is any evidence tending to support allegations of the petition which would justify a verdict in favor of plaintiff, it would be error for the court to direct a verdict for defendant.

The principal point urged by the defendant is as to the authority or agency of Hershal Salters. He was not a plumber and there is testimony to the effect that he had specific instructions to do no plumbing whatever. The negligence of the plumber in making a defective installation of the butane system and the striking of a match by Hershal Salters which set off the explosion would seem to be concurring acts of negligence, which resulted in the injuries complained of. The defendant Waddle admitted that if any one buying his butane equipment in that area had trouble that person could call the Eufaula station where Hershal Salters was stationed and could be reached.

It is only reasonable that one having trouble with such equipment would call the party from whom he bought it. It should be kept in mind that when Hershal Salters was called and went out to plaintiff’s place, there is no evidence that he did anything except to make an effort to ascertain the source of the trouble. In this effort he struck a match and the explosion occurred.

*563 While there is no evidence as to the meaning of a “turn-key” job as used in a contract to install a butane system, it must have been used in its ordinary sense, and meant that the Waddle Butane Company would make a complete installation, that is, one ready for use by the purchaser for the purposes for which it was intended. It must have imposed upon the seller the duty to so complete the installation that the purchaser could light the burners and enjoy the functions of heating the attached accessories without leaky pipes and the danger of an explosion.

Here the tank and pipes were installed by Gannis, the licensed plumber, under orders from the seller, J. A. Waddle, through his salesman, Hershal Salters. Just when and by whom the connections were made to the pipes is not clearly shown. Evidently Salters or Gannis, who was a plumber, made the connections of the pipes and the hot plate and other equipment. However, the leak of gas discovered by Gammel when he turned on the gas the day before his drive-in stand was to open, was not at any faulty connection with equipment, but the leak was in one of the pipes installed by Gannis, the licensed plumber, who was employed by J. A. Waddle to make the installation.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 340, 305 P.2d 559, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waddle-v-gammel-okla-1956.