Clonts v. Laclede Gas Light Co.

140 S.W. 970, 160 Mo. App. 456, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 658
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 S.W. 970 (Clonts v. Laclede Gas Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clonts v. Laclede Gas Light Co., 140 S.W. 970, 160 Mo. App. 456, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 658 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

NORTONI, J. —

The appeal in this case was prosecuted to tlie Supreme Court, but tbe ease was transferred to this court under the provisions of an act of the Legislature, approved June 12, 1909 (See Laws of Missouri, 1909, page 397; see, also, Sec. 3937, R. S. 1909); and was thereafter transferred by this court to the Springfield Court of Appeals under the provisions of an act of the Legislature, approved June 12, 1909. [See Laws of Missouri 1909, page 396; see, also, Sec. 3939, R. S. 1909.] In due time the case was [460]*460disposed of by tbe Springfield Court of Appeals in an opinion prepared by Presiding Judge Nixon of that court, as will appear by reference to Clonts v. Laclede Gas Light Co., 144 Mo. App. 582, 129 S. W. 238. Subsequently, the Supreme Court declared tbe legislative aot approved June 12, 1909 (Laws of Missouri 1909, page 396; Sec. 3939, R. S.”1909), wbicb purported to authorize tbe transfer of cases from this court to tbe Springfield Court, to be unconstitutional, as will appear by reference to tbe cases of State ex rel. Dunham v. Nixon, 232 Mo. 98, 133 S. W. 336; State ex rel. St. Louis Dressed Beef, etc., Co. v. Nixon, 232 Mo. 496, 134 S. W. 538; State ex rel. O’Malley v. Nixon, 233 Mo. 345, 138 S. W. 342. The cause was thereafter transferred by tbe Springfield Court of Appeals to this court, on tbe theory that tbe jurisdiction of tbe appeal continued to reside here and that proceedings bad in tbe Springfield Court with reference thereto were coram non juclice.

Tbe case has been argued and submitted here and duly considered. Upon reading tbe record and considering tbe arguments for a reversal of tbe judgment, we find ourselves unable to concur in tbe views of the Springfield Court as expressed in tbe opinion referred to. [See Clonts v. Laclede Gas Light Co., 144 Mo. App. 582, 129 S. W. 238.] Indeed, as we read tbe record, some of tbe relevant facts tending to show liability on tbe part of defendant were neither stated nor weighed by tbe Springfield Court in'its opinion. Those facts appear principally in plaintiff’s additional abstract, wbicb may have been inadvertently overlooked. Tbe case will, therefore, be re-stated, to tbe end of developing tbe facts as we ascertain them to be from a reading of both tbe defendant’s abstract and tbe additional one filed by plaintiff.

Tbe suit is for damages accrued to plaintiffs through tbe alleged negligence of defendant, wbicb resulted in tbe death of their father. It proceeds by [461]*461their next friend in behalf of plaintiffs, Cordie, aged eight, and Beulah, aged five, infant daughters of S. C. Clonts, a widower, who came to his death from a charge of electricity entering his body while engaged in operating defendant’s elevator. Plaintiffs recovered a verdict and judgment of $5000, from which defendant prosecutes the appeal. Defendant, incorporated, owns and conducts an extensive business as a manufacturer of gas and generator of electricity which it sells and transmits to its patrons in the city of St. Louis. At the time of his death, S. C. Clonts, father of .plaintiffs, was in defendant’s employ, engaged in removing debris from one floor to another of defendant’s Station A at Second and Convent streets in St. Louis. He used a wheelbarrow in connection with this duty, and it appears he was required to transfer the wheelbarrow loads of debris from one floor of the building to another by means of an electric elevator which defendant maintained therein. This electric elevator was operated by means of a tiller rope, which is described in the evidence as an uninsulated iron or steel cable ■ passing perpendicularly through the elevator around the sheave wheel in the bottom of the shaft to the drum, or motive power, above. To move the elevator up or down, it was Clonts’ duty to grasp this uninsulated iron or steel cable, or tiller rope, with sufficient force to turn on the power. Deceased approached the elevator with a wheelbarrow loaded with' debris and grasped the tiller rope, as was usual, for the purpose of moving the carriage, when a charge of electricity was communicated from the uninsulated cable, or tiller rope, into his body with sufficient force to occasion his instant death. The elevator, which Clonts was so occasionally required to operate, was propelled by an electric motor which employed a direct electric current of 500 volts. This power, though generated on the .premises, was communicated to the elevator by means of an insulated wire, or cable, which came into [462]*462the building’ from outside and connected with other like wires of defendant. The petition avers that “at all times hereinafter mentioned defendant company negligently permitted large quantities of roving electricity dangerous to human life to pervade its said premises and said elevator and every part thereof!” It then avers that at all times while said electricity was so roving and pervading defendant’s premises, defendant negligently failed and omitted to protect said iron tiller rope and elevator and the person of deceased, S. C. Clonts, against said electricity by proper and usual insulation and appliances or other suitable safeguards. “That by reason of the presence of said roving electricity and by reason of defendant’s said negligent failure to provide said iron tiller rope and said elevator and the person of said deceased with proper safeguards against said roving electricity, said elevator and all parts thereof were at all times liable to become charged with large quantities of electricity and was a dangerous and unsafe place for said S. C. Clonts to perform his said duties as laborer at defendant’s said plant as aforesaid. That defendant at all times knew or by the exercise of due care might have known of the presence of said electricity on said premises and of the fact that said elevator, iron tiller rope and the person of said deceased were not supplied with proper safeguards to protect the same against invasion of said electricity and said impending peril to the life of deceased as aforesaid.” It then avers that while Clonts was engaged in the line of his duty on September 6, 1905, and while in the act of grasping the iron or steel tiller rope of the elevator with the purpose to move it, he received into his body from such rope a powerful current of electricity, which caused his instant death. The charging portion of the petition then concludes as follows: “Plaintiffs.eharge'the fact to be that the electricity which so entered the body of 'said S. C. Clonts was roving and uncontrolled electricity, [463]*463which, defendant had knowingly and negligently permitted to pervade its said premises, elevator and iron tiller rope; that the death of said S. C. Clonts was directly dne to defendant’s negligent failure to protect said iron tiller rope, elevator and person of deceased by means of proper safeguards and appliances against said roving and uncontrolled currents of electricity.”

It is urged plaintiffs wholly failed to sustain the allegations of the petition and that the evidence conclusively shows Clonts came to his death through the sudden influx of 2000 or 2300 volts of electricity, occasioned by the crossing of the wires of defendant company with those of the Union Electric Light & Power Company at Taylor and Finney avenues, about five miles from the building in which Clonts was engaged.

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Related

Brown v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Co.
248 S.W. 12 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1923)
Minea v. St. Louis Cooperage Co.
162 S.W. 741 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.W. 970, 160 Mo. App. 456, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clonts-v-laclede-gas-light-co-moctapp-1911.