Cole v. Empire District Electric Co.

55 S.W.2d 434, 331 Mo. 824, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 523
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 434 (Cole v. Empire District Electric 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
Cole v. Empire District Electric Co., 55 S.W.2d 434, 331 Mo. 824, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 523 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*826 FRANK, P. J.

Action by appellants, plaintiffs below, to recover damages for the loss by fire of a garage building and contents alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendants. The trial court directed a verdict for defendant, whereupon plaintiffs took an involuntary nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside. Later the motion to set aside the nonsuit was overruled and plaintiffs appealed.

The evidence favorable to plaintiff tends to show the following facts:

Plaintiffs owned a garage building in the town of Seneca in which they operated a garage and repair shop. Defendant, a corporation, was engaged in furnishing and selling electric current for lighting and power purposes to the residents of the town of Seneca, and furnished electric currrent to plaintiffs for lights and power in their said garage building. The building had a frontage of fifty feet, north and south, and a depth of 125 feet, east and west. The main part of the building was 50 by 100 feet facing on the business street and was constructed of stone with ship-lap roof. At the rear of the stone building and connecting therewith was a frame structure twenty-five feet in depth and of the same width as the stone building. The floor of both buildings was all concrete. The walls of the frame building were constructed of ship-lap covered with sheet metal. The inside walls and ceiling were covered with tar building paper. *827 Tbe stone building was used as a garage and the frame building as a repair stop. Electric power for one motor was used from tbe power circuit, and electric current from the light circuit was used for lighting, and the operation of some small motor driven tools. The motor on the power circuit operated an air compressor. The poles and lines of defendant company were located in the alley about 30 feet from the rear of plaintiffs’ building, and a transformer from which the wires were extended into plaintiffs’ building was on a pole in this alley.

Defendant company, was making a change from a 25-cycle to a 60-eycle system. On and prior to December 12, 1926, four electric wires extended from the lines in the alley into plaintiffs’ garage through the rear wall of the frame building, entering ten or twelve feet from the ground where they were attached on the inside of the said wall to two meters. One meter was used for the power circuit of 220 volts and the other for the light circuit of 110 volts, wires being connected with each meter, from which they extended into various parts of the building. A strip approximately six inches wide and about eighteen inches long had been removed from the sheet iron covering the rear wall of the frame building so as to permit the wires to pass through holes in the wall into the room; and these four wires passed through porcelain insulators in the wall. The two meters and one switch were attached to ordinary pine boards nailed to the rear wall just below where the wires entered. The switch was attached to the north end of this board and just above the switch there was a fuse for each of the two wires on the light circuit. The two wires ran from the switch to the light meter, which was next attached to the board, and from there extended throughout the building for lighting purposes, and for the operation of small tools attached to light sockets. The only other equipment on this board was the power meter which was fastened at or near the south end of the board. The other wires came in from the pole line through the board wall and directly into the power meter, and extended from the power meter to a one and one-half h. p. two-phase motor located near the northeast corner of the stone building, just inside of the east wall. There was no fuse nor switch between the meter and the outside. Immediately above this motor there was a switch and also a fuse on each line. The tar paper was tacked on the top side of this board, about four inches from the meter.

On December 12, 1926, a foreman and other employees of defendant replaced this motor with a sixty cycle motor of the same horsepower, said replacement being made necessary by reason of changing the electrical system from twenty-five cycle to sixty cycle. At the same time they installed an additional wire extending from the lines in the alley into and through the rear wall of the frame building *828 and in close proximity to the wires which were installed and in use prior to that time. They bored a hole through the wood wall and the tar paper for the purpose of carrying this additional wire to the inside. The wire was insulated, but was not run through' any porcelain or other insulator and there was nothing between the wire and the wood wall and tar paper and it came in close contact with both. This wire was connected with and attached to the power meter without any switch or fuse being installed before it reached the meter. At that time the foreman stated to one of the plaintiffs that such installation was not right, but when they changed the meters, which they contemplated doing in a short time, they would make it safe. Three days thereafter, the employees of defendant returned to the garage for the purpose of changing the power meter. The power was shut off to enable this change to be made. The power meter that had been used prior thereto was removed and another meter installed in the same place to which the wires were connected. No switch or fuses were then installed between that meter and the outside, and no change was made in the installation of the additional wire put in on the previous Sunday. The power was turned on and the switch to the new- motor was opened for the purpose of operating the pump to fill the air tank. From fifteen to thirty minutes after the new motor was turned on a fire started on the inside of the frame part of the garage where the meters were installed on the rear wall. No one -was present in the room where the fire started. Mr. Cole and other witnesses who were then in the office at the front of the stone building heard a “cracking” noise which sounded to them like a fire, and upon investigation Mr. Cole saw flames shooting upward from the meters, and the tar paper above that place and extending upward into the ceiling was in flames. There was then no fire or flames at any other place except at and above the meters. About that time two young men standing in the yard of their home just across the alley and opposite the garage observed flames shooting upward from the wires where they entered the building and also observed that.at that time there was no fire whatever on the outside below the place where the wires entered the building. The meters were destroyed by the fire.

Other facts will be stated in course of the opinion.

Appellants raise two questions, (1) that the trial court erred in refusing to permit appellant’s expert witness, Roth, to give his opinion as to what caused the fire, and (2) that the trial court erred in directing a verdict for defendant.

It'is our judgment that plaintiffs’ evidence made a case for the jury. Three eyewitnesses saw the fire shortly after it started. Homer Cole, one of the plaintiffs, was in the office of the garage when the fire started. He heard a cracking noise which he thought was a fire. He testified:

*829 “When I heard the cracking sound I stepped out of the office and looked for a car to be on fire somewhere.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 434, 331 Mo. 824, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-empire-district-electric-co-mo-1932.