Conduitt v. Trentonton Gas & Electric Co.

31 S.W.2d 21, 326 Mo. 133, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 802
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 4, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 31 S.W.2d 21 (Conduitt v. Trentonton Gas & 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
Conduitt v. Trentonton Gas & Electric Co., 31 S.W.2d 21, 326 Mo. 133, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 802 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

M. Jessie Conduitt instituted this action to recover damages for alleged personal injuries sustained from a shock received when turning on an electric light in her residence in the city of Trenton. She recovered a verdict and judgment for $20,000, from which the defendant has appealed. The case was tried on an amended petition charging negligence generally, and an answer in the form of a general denial. The plaintiff's death having occurred pending the appeal the cause was revived here in the name of her executor, the respondent herein. References hereinafter made to respondent are intended to apply to the plaintiff, who was the original respondent. The assignments of error on this appeal complain of the overruling of appellant's demurrer to the evidence, of the admission and exclusion of evidence, of the misconduct of the jury, of the giving and refusal of instructions, of the size of the verdict, and the argument of respondent's attorneys.

The evidence tended to show that at the time of the alleged accident and long prior thereto the appellant owned and operated an electric light plant and a system of poles, wires, transformers and other equipment for the generation and distribution of electric current for light and power in Trenton, and had no competitor in that enterprise in that city. The respondent was a resident of Trenton and her residence was supplied with electric current by the appellant for compensation. The current was conducted over *Page 138 appellant's service wires to the outside of the building, at which point the wires were connected with the interior wiring of the house. The latter, with the lighting appliances, had some years before been installed by respondent's predecessor in title. The appellant's system of wires in the immediate vicinity of respondent's residence consisted, first, of a primary line carrying 2300 volts of electricity and running from the generating plant to a transformer located about two blocks away. By means of the transformer the current was reduced to 110 volts for use in the residence served by that circuit, and was conducted thereto over the service wires aforesaid, which were intended to carry and usually did carry 110 volts. These service wires were on cross-arms attached near the tops of the poles, and the cross-arm carried another wire which furnished the current for the street lighting system. At the time in question the street lighting wire was charged with a current of probably 1600 to 1800 volts. The secondary wires were not grounded at the transformer.

Respondent, a spinster thirty-nine years of age, testified in substance that on the evening of August 14, 1924, at about 9:30 o'clock she undertook to turn on certain lights in her residence which were operated by drop chains. When she pulled the chain of the dining room light she "got a terrible jerking sensation, a shock in her left arm." A few minutes later she undertook in the same way to turn on the light in the lavatory under the stairway. "She had to pull the light socket off the wall in order to get loose. She had that terrible gripping sensation down through her left hand and arm." She had taken the chain in her left hand in each instance. When asked about the condition of the floor she answered that she made no examination, but so far as she knew it was dry. She went part way home with her niece, who had spent the evening with her. She testified she did not know what caused the shock. When she arose next morning she discovered that "her left eyelid was drooping and the vision of the eye was blurred; her left hand and arm were numb and there was a numbness down her back on the left side; the hand began to pain immediately; it pained all the time and gradually grew worse."

Afterwards she had a soreness in her chest. She had never experienced any of these pains or symptoms before. Her left hand and arm gradually became smaller, and by autumn of 1925 the left arm had become much shrunken and the muscles of her left shoulder had wasted away. Respondent did not consult a physician until two weeks after the accident. She attributed the delay to the fact she did not at the time think the shock was serious, and to her belief in Christian Science. She consulted her physician, Dr. Moore, several times in September, once in November, 1924, and occasionally thereafter until the close of the year 1925. She worked more or *Page 139 less from the time of the accident down to Christmas, 1925; but with an impaired ability due to the condition described. While on a visit in Oklahoma in early February, 1926, she became paralyzed from the waist down. On the ninth day of that month she was taken to the Mayo clinic at Rochester, Minnesota, for examination and treatment, remaining there seven or eight days. Returning to Trenton she entered a hospital whence she was brought on a stretcher to the trial in May, 1926, to give her testimony. A few months thereafter she died.

From the year 1902 down to the year 1925 the respondent on several occasions consulted oculists for the purpose of being fitted with glasses for far-sightedness. In 1914, an exophthalmic goiter was removed from her neck. In 1919, a cancerous tumor located a few inches above her left breast was removed, also a mole on her face. At the same time her tonsils were removed. These various operations appeared to be successful and her recovery was apparently complete. During the next five years and to the time of the accident she felt and appeared to be strong and vigorous; gained some fifteen pounds in weight and was heavier than she had ever been; did various kinds of work, such as clerking at times, at other times doing her housework, making bread for sale, tending her garden, mowing her yard, and so forth.

Dr. Moore testified that when respondent consulted him first after the accident her health had been good for some years; that on that occasion she had a condition he had never observed before. (He had several years before fitted her with glasses.) She complained of her vision and want of sensation in her left hand and arm. There was a marked drooping of her eyelid and a contraction of the pupil. He kept her under observation until she went to Oklahoma. When he had last examined her eyes, in December, 1925, she had one-sixth vision in the left eye and normal in the right. She was decidedly more nervous after the accident, and within a few months the atrophy of the arm began. She had a condition that was produced suddenly and the shock as described by the respondent was in his opinion sufficient to produce it. He further testified that a latent cancer could be activated into actual and earlier growth by a strong electric shock, and it is highly probable that it would be. Dr. O.R. Rooks gave similar testimony.

Several witnesses whose residences were on the same electrical circuit with respondent's residence testified that they received shocks when turning on their lights after nine o'clock of the evening of the accident. One of these witnesses by telephone reported the condition to appellant's lineman. Collier, who appeared in response to the call and in testing the lighting appliances was himself slightly shocked. *Page 140

Being unable to discover the source of the trouble he called the superintendent, Richardson, who came at once. After giving directions to the plant to cut off the current, Richardson and Collier undertook to trace the circuit in order to locate the cause of the trouble. They found a limb had fallen across the street lighting wire and the service wires at a point about two blocks distant from the Conduitt residence. The tree, to which the limb was still partly attached, was inside the line of private property and about eight feet from the wires.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W.2d 21, 326 Mo. 133, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conduitt-v-trentonton-gas-electric-co-mo-1930.