Lead Opinion
The first issue which this court must decide is whether there was any showing of negligence on the part of defendant which proximately caused the death of plaintiff’s decedent.
Plaintiff claims that defendant failed to exercise due care in that it sent to Ford Motor Company a tank in a dangerous condition, i. e., one containing explosive vapors, predicating her claim on the theory of negligent performance of a contractual obligation.
The trial court properly rejected evidence pertaining to the contract.
The duty under the contract, as shown according to the proffered testimony, was to send a tank which was “clean” so that transmission oil could be stored in it. Plaintiff’s decedent could not claim protection under such contract. He was entitled only to the protection afforded generally by the exercise of due care on the part of defendant.
Plaintiff has misconceived the difference between negligence and mere breach of contract. The case of Durham v. Warner Elevator Mfg. Co. (1956),
Likewise, the case of Pennsylvania Rd. Co. v. Snyder (1896),
In the first place, it can not be said that the gasoline vapors in the tank constituted a “defective condition.” It is a matter of judicial notice that gasoline is a common substance in use at
The case of Mudrich, a Minor, v. Standard Oil Co. (1950),
Here, in order to substantiate a finding of negligence, there must be more than a showing that the tank which was sent to Ford contained gasoline fumes and gasoline.
Even if the sending of such tank was negligence, such negligence must have proximately caused the death. There must be no efficient intervening cause, i. the intervention of “another conscious and responsible agency which could or should have eliminated the hazard” between the agency creating a hazard and the injury. Thrash, a Minor, v. U-Drive-It Co. (1953),
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is, therefore, affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Ford ordered a clean tank from Stillpass. Such a tank would not have been explosive. Still-pass delivered to Ford a tank containing explosive vapors. (A Ford employee testified that a meter test of the explosion potential of the tank disclosed one of its three compartments to be 100% explosive.)
In my opinion, a jury could reasonably find and perhaps should be directed to find that the explosive character of the tank represented a defect. The tank furnished certainly contained elements of hazard excluded by the terms of Ford’s order for a clean tank.
There is evidence that Stillpass knew of this defect before it delivered the tank and that it knew how to clean the tank so as to eliminate such a defect. Also, the jury would be justified in inferring that Stillpass knew of the hazard involved in a tank containing such explosive vapors. Thus, the jury could reasonably infer that Stillpass was negligent in failing to eliminate that defect.
Obviously, the explosive character of the tank quite promptly caused the explosion that caused plaintiff’s death. Our decisions in Durham v. Warner Elevator Mfg. Co. (1956), 166 Ohio
In my opinion, it is not. There was proffered evidence that the president of Stillpass was told that Ford “was not willing to accept the truck in the condition in which it arrived” and that he “asked that Ford * # * undertake to clean the truck * * * and then described the method which Stillpass uses to purge gasoline fumes from their tanks, by compressed air.” Ford was only getting ready to begin to do this when the explosion occurred. Thus, the jury could reasonably find from the evidence that Ford did nothing which could even have contributed to the explosion.
It is suggested that Ford should have refused the dangerous tank. If it had done so and the tank had exploded on the way back to Stillpass, Ford might have been involved in claims (even though perhaps without merit) for damages against it. Thus, the jury would be fully justified in finding that Ford exercised ordinary care and was not negligent in accepting the tank, even though it knew of its dangerous condition and had started to get ready to do what Stillpass told it to do in order to eliminate the danger. Cf. Hurt v. Charles J. Rogers Transportation Co. (1955),
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The principle of res ispa loquitur may well apply to the case at bar.
Hiell v. Golco Oil Co.,
“The principle of res ipsa loquitur is applicable when a customer exercising due care is injured by an unexplained explosion at a filling station where gasolines are being blended under the exclusive management and control of the owner.”
The second paragraph of the syllabus in Fink v. New York Central Rd. Co. (1944),
“2. In Ohio the rule of res ipsa loquitur is not a rule of substantive law but is a rule of evidence which permits the jury, but not the court in a jury trial, to draw an inference of negligence where the instrumentality causing the injury was under the exclusive management and control of the defendant and the accident occurred under such circumstanes that in the ordinary course of events it would not have occurred if ordinary care had been observed. (Glowacki, a Minor, v. North Western Ohio Ry. & Power Co.,
At the time of the explosion, the dangerous instrumentality was under the exclusive management and control of either Stillpass or Ford, or both. That question would be for the jury, although it may be urged that, as a matter of law, Ford exercised no control over the tank at the time of the explosion, as it was then following specific instructions given by Stillpass to Ford.
We cannot see eye to eye with the majority opinion in respect to the elements necessary to create an independent intervening agency in the ease at bar. It must be shown that the intervening agency was the cause of the death of Mr. Bennison. The majority opinion finds that Ford was not negligent
39 Ohio Jurisprudence 545, Section 39, reads:
“ # * Events of causative influence may intervene between the initial act and the final result, without displacing the initial act from the position of proximate cause, if the intermediate events themselves were natural sequences of the initial act. * * *” (Emphasis added.)
At page 542, Section 37, of the same volume, it is said that:
“The causal connection between the defendant’s negligence and the plaintiff’s injuries may be broken by an intervening cause. The general rule is that if a new and independent force, acting in and of itself, intervenes, causing an injury, it will be regarded as the proximate cause. The intervention of such independent and efficient cause breaks the chain of causal connection. However, to relieve a person from the consequences of his negligence, it is not enough that the negligent act or omission of another was nearest in the order of events to the injury, nor that without it the injury would not have occurred; to have this effect it must have been the efficient, independent, and self-producing cause, disconnected from the negligence of the first person. For a cause to be an efficient intervening cause, it must be one, not brought into operation by the original wrongful act, but operating entirely independent thereof-, it must be such a cause as would have produced the result without the cooperation of the original wrong. * * (Emphasis added.) See Thrash, a Minor, v. U-Drive-It Co.; Spot Motor Co.,
The dependents of the decedent brought this action through their representative against the Stillpass Transit Company alone. This procedure was proper,
“Where a person is wrongfully injured at the hands of two or more persons acting in concert, or acting independently but concurrently in causing a single injury, each of the wrongdoers is severally liable to such person for the full amount of the damage occasioned thereby; and the person injured may enforce his claim therefor in an action against all of them jointly, any one of them severally, or any number of them less than the whole.”
The judgment of the Court of Appeals should be reversed and the cause remanded to the Court of Common Pleas for a trial by a court and jury.
