Capitol Traction Co. v. McKeon

103 A. 314, 132 Md. 79, 1918 Md. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 A. 314 (Capitol Traction Co. v. McKeon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capitol Traction Co. v. McKeon, 103 A. 314, 132 Md. 79, 1918 Md. LEXIS 18 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, the Capitol Traction Company, owns and operates an electric railway in the City of A¥ashington, with its .lines extending into Montgomery County, Maryland.

The appellee, Thomas Richard McKean, was prior to', and on the 13th day of May, 1916, employed by said company as an assistant fireman at the company’s power house, in the District of Columbia.

On the morning of the 13th day of May, 1916, while the plaintiff was at work in the performance of his duties, he suffered personal injuries caused by the explosion of a steam pipe, tube or coil in one of the defendant’s boilers, located in *81 the power house; and this suit was brought to recover fox such injuries.

In the trial of the case below the jury, by its verdict, awarded him damages to the extent of $2,000 and a judgment was entered upon the verdict for said sum. It is from that judgment this appeal is taken.

It will be necessary for us to go somewhat fully into the facts of this case, as the defendant by its first prayer, which was refused, asked that the case be taken .from the jury because of a want of legally sufficient evidence to entitle the plaintiff to recover.

The declaration charges that the defendant, wholly disregarding its duty, negligently permitted said hot water coil to become impaired so that it was unsafe and dangerous to the life of the plaintiff, and said defendant “did not use due care, caution and diligence in the care, inspection and operation of said hot-water coil, but permitted the same to corrode, rust and 'weaken so that the said coil was unable to carry the amount of steam, water and vapor that was necessary to operate said electrical plant,” causing the coil of the boiler to explode, resulting in the injuries complained of.

It is contended by the defendant that there is no evidence of the negligence charged against it in the declaration from which the accident resulted legally sufficient to go to the jury, and that its first prayer should have been granted.

The plaintiff at the time of the accident was about 19' years of age, and had been in the employment of the company for nearly four years. His duties consisted of oiling the pumps, lighting the stoker engines and helping the firemen.

In the power house there are twelve boilers used in generating electricity for the operation of defendant’s street railway lines in the District of Columbia and Maryland. Four of these are regularly operated each month, one is banked and held in reserve for two months, and the others are out of service for two months; at the expiration of said periods *82 those in service are taken out of service, and a like number of the others put in service for the same period, so that each boiler is in service one month and out of service two months. The boilers are arranged in two rows of six each, facing each other, with a firing alley between them, and under each boiler is a furnace or a fire box.

The pipes or tubes, which we will hereafter refer to as tubes, -are of iron and are four inches in diameter. In each boiler there are fourteen rows of tubes, one above the other, with twenty-one tubes in each row, with a space of two or three inches between them.

The plaintiff testified that he on the morning of the accident was getting No. 1 boiler, the reserve boiler, ready to start up; “and just as he got the grate down” he heard a big explosion in boiler No. I, directly across the alley, and from it came fire and steam, knocking One Harvey, an employee oi the company, against him, throwing them both to the ground and burning the plaintiff about the arms, chest, legs, face and ears.

At the time of and prior to the accident William Walter Locke was employed by the defendant company as foreman of the boiler room. He, in addition to other duties, was required to clean, inspect and keep in repair, the boilers and other machinery connected therewith, and to whom his subordinates were required to report any and all imperfections in the boilers, etc., that came to their knowledge.

In the employment of the company at this time was a younger brother of the plaintiff, George McKeon, whose duties and' compensation were the same as those of his brother; he, however, worked at night, while the plaintiff was on duty in the daytime. They both had to assist in cleaning and keeping clean the boilers. This involved the removal, by means of an air hose, the dirt and soot that accumulated between the tubes of the boiler so that the flames could freely pass between the tubes.

*83 The pipe on tlie end of said air hose was what is known as a three-eighth-ineh pipe, about three-quarters of an inch in diameter on the outside. As we have said, the tubes of the boiler were about two inches apart, and it was. between them that the hose pipe was inserted to clean therefrom the accumulated dirt and soot. This was done by each of the boys.

George testified that about the 8th or 9th day of May, four or five days before the happening of the accident, he noticed that the hose pipe would not go in between the tubes and would “work bard in there”; that there was not enough room for the pipe to go in, and he told Locke about it, telling him that the tube was swelled and he “could not half blow out the tubes.” That be reported these facts twice to Locke, the first time on the next morning after discovering the same, and Locke said: “That is nothing; that will not hurt anything.” He further testified that he blew the tubes the night before the accident and that the tubes on that night were so swelled that ho could not get his three-eighth-ineh pipe in there, and that such condition had lasted for three, four or six days; that prior thereto there had been no trouble. He also stated that it was his further duty when he found any defect to notify the head fireman, Wigginton, and that he notified him before notifying Locke of the difficulty he had experienced in cleaning the tubes.

Lpon cross-examination, the witness testified that the back of the tubes was blown by steam by the fireman, while the front of the tubes was blown by the witness by the use of an air hose inserted through the holes upon the side of the boiler; that he could not get the air pipe between the second row from the bottom, but had no trouble with any others. It was only the one row, and that the tube where the trouble existed was halfway across the boiler from the air-pipe hole and was on the side opposite him. lie further testified that he did not know whether his brother had noticed it; he had not said anything to him about it.

*84 He also stated in his cross-examination that when he first reported the trouble to Loche he said to him that the defect was in Ho. 7 boiler, and that he could find it; “that there is something wrong with those tubes; I could not get the rod hack in there to- get the dirt off; there seems to be something-wrong with them”; and Locke replied that he would look after it.

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103 A. 314, 132 Md. 79, 1918 Md. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capitol-traction-co-v-mckeon-md-1918.