Ambruster v. Levitt Realty & Investment Co.

107 S.W.2d 74, 341 Mo. 364, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 74 (Ambruster v. Levitt Realty & Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ambruster v. Levitt Realty & Investment Co., 107 S.W.2d 74, 341 Mo. 364, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 432 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at September Term, 1936, April 21, 1937; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at May Term, 1937, June 30, 1937. Action for injuries alleged to have resulted from carbon monoxide gas escaping from a gas-operated refrigerator. Verdict for $8,000 went for plaintiff and defendant appealed from the judgment entered.

Plaintiff alleged that she and another young woman occupied furnished apartment 304 in defendant's apartment building at 3705 Washington Avenue, St. Louis; that the refrigerator furnished was an Electrolux, "operated by the ignition of a constantly flowing stream of illuminating gas;" that the refrigerator burner and other attachments thereto were defective, which defects caused to be "created and released, dangerous, poisonous and noxious gases;" that on March 17, 1932, she was overcome by such gases escaping from the refrigerator. Then follow eight separate specifications of negligence, but plaintiff went to the jury on negligent repair of the refrigerator.

The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The reply, we infer, was a general denial of new matter.

Defendant assigns error (1) on refusal of its demurrer to the evidence; (2) on plaintiff's Instruction No. 1; (3) admission of alleged incompetent evidence; and (4) on an alleged excessive verdict. *Page 368

[1] We might say here that plaintiff contends that after defendant's demurrer to the evidence was refused, it went to the jury on instructions hypothesizing facts and directing a verdict for defendant, if such facts were found, and is, therefore, in no position to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence. Such is no longer the rule. [Elkin v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,335 Mo. 951, 74 S.W.2d 600.]

At the time of plaintiff's alleged injury she was employed as a bookkeeper by a furniture company. Plaintiff and Miss Lorelle Lamb occupied the apartment. Measured by the demurrer, the following facts appear: Defendant "was to take care of everything" in the apartment, in short, keep the apartment furnishings in reasonably good order. According to plaintiff, about three days prior to March 17th, she and Miss Lamb "spoke to Mr. Levitt (department manager) about the refrigerator not operating, and at that time he sent a colored man upstairs to take care of it for us; I looked at it the evening that we came home that the man had fixed the refrigerator, and found that the flame was burning. It was a yellow flame. That was three days before March 17th. I reported that the following morning to Mr. Levitt." And prior to that time they had some trouble with the refrigerator and Levitt told them to watch the flame underneath the refrigerator and if that went out to notify him at once, and according to plaintiff, the flame went out, and Levitt was notified. (It is not claimed, however, that the going out of the flame in any manner caused gas to escape. On the contrary, it appears that, when such occurred, the gas was automatically cut off.)

Plaintiff further testified that she and Miss Lamb worked at the same place; that on March 17th they arrived home about six P.M.; that "it was very cold;" that she and Miss Lamb planned to take dinner that evening at the home of plaintiff's mother; that she, plaintiff, took a bath and partly dressed, but "though I would wait until Miss Lamb was ready before I slipped my dress on;" that when Miss Lamb went into the bathroom, she, plaintiff, "picked up a book and started to read" and fell asleep. When she awoke she had "a dreadful headache" and it was too late to go to the mother's for the dinner engagement. "We tried to pull this in-a-door bed down and that is when we noticed the great loss of strength. We had difficulty in pulling this bed out of the wall, which ordinarily was no task for us at all. So we finally got the bed down and went to sleep with out clothes on . . . and was unconscious of anything else, headache or anything, until the next morning." They were awakened next morning by an electric alarm clock that rang "until you get up and turn it off." Plaintiff and Miss Lamb got up next morning about eight o'clock, and plaintiff testified that "as soon as *Page 369 the air hit us we started vomiting;" that she (plaintiff) vomited "until about 9:30;" that she went to work, but "got there about 11 o'clock;" that when she arrived at her place of work her lips and face were swollen and blue, "had a blue tinge." She remained at the office of her employer until two or three o'clock when she was taken home by one of the employees. She said that she had been vomiting "all during the day." She went to bed arriving back at the apartment and "slept until the following morning," when she "again attempted to go to work," but was unable to work. She remained at her place of employment on this day, Saturday, until about eleven o'clock, when she fainted and a coemployee took her back to the apartment, where she prepared her lunch, but could not retain it.

According to plaintiff, she "developed a very persistent cough on Saturday," March 19th. Sunday morning, March 20th, Dr. Signorelli was called and plaintiff was taken to St. John's Hospital. Tuesday, March 22nd, she started menstruating, which was very painful. About four years and two years prior to March 17th, she had a painful menstruating period, but she said these were not so severe as after the alleged gas experience. Plaintiff was at the hospital about ten days when she went to her mother's home at Jennings in St. Louis County, where she remained during April. She went back to work the first or second week in May, and worked "a few hours a day," until she returned to the hospital "first week in June." The recurrence of painful menstruation was the occasion for return to the hospital. On this occasion she was at the hospital one week, and unconscious "much of the time." She had pains in the "lower abdomen and the right side" and was unable to stand. "I was kept under hypodermic needles all the time I was there." She returned from St. John's Hospital to her mother's home, and next morning went to the Lutheran Hospital, where an operation was performed by Dr. Hanser.

Miss Lamb, whose suit against defendant is "still pending," gave about the same version as to what occurred at the apartment as did plaintiff. She testified that "two or three days before March 17th," the refrigerator flame "was very indistinct. A sort of yellow color. . . . It was about 10 o'clock (night of March 17th) when we awoke — very stuffy, and I had a terrible headache; was very nervous and weak. . . . I could not think clearly; I vomited all morning long."

Ben Newman testified that he was in the employ of the Laclede Gas Light Company (which company sold this refrigerator to defendant); that his main work "as a service man was refrigerators and house heating;" that about March 19, 1932, he was sent to plaintiff's apartment; that defendant's manager, Mr. Levitt, said *Page 370 "the refrigerator was out of order up in 304 and he said that one of the girls was made sick." Newman said that the refrigerator flame "had a slight yellow tip;" that the flue which "generates the heat" was slightly carbonized; that he "found lint in the screen" around the burner; that the mesh of the screen was real fine; that "the lint restricts the air from going in and mixing with the gas; that he cleaned out the carbonized condition of the flue and removed the lint. "Q.

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107 S.W.2d 74, 341 Mo. 364, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ambruster-v-levitt-realty-investment-co-mo-1937.