Dakan v. G. W. Chase, & Son Mercantile Co.

94 S.W. 944, 197 Mo. 238, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 19, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 944 (Dakan v. G. W. Chase, & Son Mercantile 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
Dakan v. G. W. Chase, & Son Mercantile Co., 94 S.W. 944, 197 Mo. 238, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 29 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

Defendant corporation at the • times hereinafter mentioned was engaged in the business of manufacturing candy in the city of St. Joseph; the plaintiff was an employee in its service. Defendant’s factory was destroyed by fire on December 23, 1902; at the time the fire occurred the plaintiff and several other young women employees were in a room on the third floor of the building, and to escape death from the flames they jumped out of a window, which was thirty or thirty-five feet from the ground. The plaintiff by the fall sustained very severe injuries. She brings this suit to recover damages for her injuries, alleging that they , were the result of the negligence of the defendant her employer; she recovered a judgment for $5,000, and the defendant appealed.

The buildings in which defendant 'conducted its business fronted east on Second street, and extended back west about 140 feet to an alley. There were three buildings in the group, which are referred to in the [247]*247record as the north, the middle and the south building. The north building was separated from the one in the middle by a solid partition brick wall; we have nothing to do with that building, it is only to the middle and south buildings that our attention is directed. The employees entered the factory by the front door in the south building. There were usually 150 or more employees, the most of whom were girls from fifteen to nineteen years of age, about forty of whom usually worked on the second and third floors.

The petition is quite lengthy; it is descriptive of the buildings, their contents and the mode of conducting the business; it charges negligence in several particulars, the combustible character of the internal partitions, the lack of sufficient exits, doors, stairways, fire escapes, etc., the condition of the electric lights, the boiler, furnaces, kettles, pipes, gas-jets, electric wires, electric lamps, lack of sufficient watching to discover the fire, lack of care tp discover it and to give alarm, etc. In appellant’s printed abstract it is said that the defendant filed a motion to strike out parts of the amended petition, which was overruled and exception taken and preserved in a term bill of exceptions, and what purports to be a copy of that motion is set out in the abstract, but no such term bill of exceptions is in this record, and that motion is not in the bill of exceptions now before us. It is also said that there was a motion to make the amended petition more definite and certain, which was also overruled, and what purports to be a copy of that motion is set out in the abstract, but it does not appear in the bill of exceptions. And the same is true of an alleged motion to require the plaintiff to elect upon which of, so-called, two causes of action she will stand. After the motions were overruled defendant answered by general denial and a plea of contributory negligence; there is also in the answer what appellant calls a plea of assumption of risk.

The evidence in the case is very voluminous ¡ it wa§ [248]*248necessarily so, because for an intelligent understanding of tbe case a full description of the buildings, of their contents and of the mode of conducting the business was necessary. It is sufficient, however, for our present purpose to say that the evidence on the part of the plaintiff very clearly shows that the defendant was engaged in a business very hazardous on account of its liability to fire. From the basement to the third story the conditions were full of danger of fire. Whilst the partition wall between the south and the middle buildings was of brick, with a door through which to pass from one to the other on each floor, yet the inner partition walls making separate rooms for the various divisions of the work were of wood; the shelves and scaffoldings that lined the walls were of wood; the materials used in the making of- candy, of which there was a large quantity on each floor, were of highly combustible character; the material used in packing was equally so, paper, paper boxes, excelsior packing, etc., the furnaces, gas jets for heating, the kettles, the steam pipes, etc., all combined to make an establishment peculiarly liable to destruction by fire. And, as if facilitating a quick communication of fire from one floor to another, there were freight elevator wells and what was called a dummy elevator -or dumb-waiter. One of the elevator wells and this dumb-waiter were in the middle building, and it was through the dumbwaiter that the blaze and smoke came up to the third floor, and cut off the escape of the plaintiff and those with her. This dumb-waiter came up very near the only door in the brick partition wall through which they could escape from the middle building, where the fire then was, into the south building. Just east of the dumb-waiter was a stairway leading to the 'second floor. Down this stairway one of the girls, the one to first discover the fire, made her escape, but the fire gained so rapidly that it cut off the escape of the others.

There was on each floor and in the basement a large [249]*249quantity of highly inflammable material. There were boilers in the basement heated by gas jets; these were within a few feet of the basement end of the dumb elevator. It was the custom to light these gas jets about five o’clock in the morning and the night-watchman testified that he did so on this morning. On the second floor there were four furnaces heated with coke; they were two feet wide and three feet high.

In the rear or west end of the third floor in the middle building were two rooms of wooden walls used by the female employees for dressing rooms. In these the young women changed their clothes, putting on their working clothes before going to work and taking them off when the work of the day was ended. These rooms were not used for any other purpose. There was a fire escape on the outside at the front or east end of the buildings, but none at the rear end where those dressing rooms were, except that there was an iron ladder on the outside west end of the south building extending from the top of the building down to the second floor, terminating over an areaway in which there were stone steps leading from the ground into the cellar; that ladder was not accessible to the girls in the dressing room.

At 6:45 o ’clock in the morning of December 23, 1902, the plaintiff and several other young women employees came to the factory, entered the front door in the south building, passed up the stairway in that building to the second floor, crossed over through the door in the partition wall into the middle building, thence up' the stairway in that building to the third floor and back to the dressing rooms to get ready for the work which was to begin at 7 o’clock. At the time they thus went, up the stairways and into the dressing rooms they observed no indication of fire. One of the girls, Miss Grleich, who had arrived earlier than the plaintiff, was first ready to leave the dressing' rooms; when she opened the door she discovered smoke and called out to [250]*250the others that there was fire and as she ran out she caught one by the hand and tried to pull her along, bnt the girl was frightened when they got ont and ran back into the dressing room; flame and smoke were then coming out of the opening in the dumb waiter; Miss Gleich ran on aiming to. get to the fire escape in the front part of the building, but in the excitement she made a misstep andf ell down the stairway; itwas a fortunate misstep for her, because as it resulted she was not hurt and in that way made her escape into the south building.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 944, 197 Mo. 238, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dakan-v-g-w-chase-son-mercantile-co-mo-1906.