Day v. Consolidated Light, Power & Ice Co.

117 S.W. 81, 136 Mo. App. 274, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 43
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 81 (Day v. Consolidated Light, Power & Ice 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
Day v. Consolidated Light, Power & Ice Co., 117 S.W. 81, 136 Mo. App. 274, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 43 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiffs were the parents .of Shelton Day Moody, a boy six years old at the time of his death which occurred February 14, 1907. Defendant is a corporation engaged in the business of manufracturing and vending electricity for light and power in the city of Joplin. The death of the child was caused by an electric shock which he received by coming in contact with one of defendant’s highly charged wires, and it is alleged in the petition that defendant was negligent, first, in placing the wire and, second, in permitting it to remain in a defective and dangerous condition caused by the decay and consequent removal of a part of the. insulation.

The answer is voluminous, but in effect the main defenses interposed are a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. Verdict and judgment were [277]*277for plaintiffs in the sum of $2,000, and the cause is here on the appeal of defendant.

First, we shall dispose of the questions raised by the contention of defendant that its request for an instruction peremptorily directing a verdict in its favor should have been granted. Material facts disclosed by the evidence of plaintiffs are as follows: At the time of his death, the boy was living with his mother (now Mrs. Moody), who kept a rooming house on the third floor of a business house in Joplin at No. 413 Main street. Adjoining this building on the south was a two-story store building with a flat tin roof. Windows in Mrs. Moody’s apartments afforded easy access to this roof, and the evidence tends to show that the roof was used as a back yard by Mrs. Moody, her family and tenants. A clothes line was stretched across it; in the summer, tenants sometimes slept there and, at times, children used it as a playground. We are stating the facts in their aspect most ■ favorable to the cause of action asserted — a thing we should do in ruling on the demurrer to the evidence. The owner of the adjoining building was not Mrs. Moody’s landlord and there is' evidence that he complained about the roof being littered with trash and refuse, but he made no complaint to Mrs. Moody and it is fair to say that for a long period, he tacitly acquiesced in the use of the roof by her and her tenants.. Early in the afternoon of February 14, 1907, the boy was playing with a return rubber ball in one of the rooms of his mother’s apartments. The weather being pleasant, the window was open and the ball accidentally bounded out onto the roof. The boy went after the ball and had been on the roof but a few moments when his mother, who was at work in one of the rooms, observed him and called him to come in. He replied that he would obey as soon as he could get his ball. At this time, a woman lodger asked him to hand her a shirtwaist which was on the clothes line. He did so, and then started towards the alley end of [278]*278the roof. In a short time, his mother called again to him and receiving no response, she looked out and saw him lying on the roof near the end. It was discovered that the ball had rolled off into the alley and the position of the body (the boy was dead) indicated that the child had crept to'the end of the roof and looked over into the alley to see where the ball had fallen. Evidently he had grasped the metal gutter with his hands and protruded his head far enough to bring his forehead into contact with the electric light wire owned by defendant which, at the time, was charged with a deadly current of electricity and from which the insulation had worn off at the place of contact. A downspout, in all likelihood, served to complete the new circuit afforded the current by the contact of the boy’s head, with the wire. The wire was on a line which defendant had built along that side of the public alley. At the rear end of the building, the wire ran parallel to the end of the roof and was about six inches out from the edge of the gutter and about the same distance above it. There is evidence to the effect that defendant had received actual knowledge of the defective and dangerous condition of the insulation a long time before the injury occurred.

The highly dangerous and subtle nature of electricity has compelled the courts of this State to require of persons who make merchandise of it and who transmit it along the public thoroughfares of populous communities the exercise of the highest degree of care to prevent its escape from appointed channels. Where it reasonably may be said that an ordinarily careful and prudent person observing the highest degree of care would anticipate that persons in the exercise of lawful right might be brought into contact with wires carrying powerful currents of electricity, the law charges the owner of such wires to insulate them and to maintain them in a proper state of repair. This is on the broad and fundamental principle “that in all cases in [279]*279which any person undertakes the performance of an act which if not done with care and skill will be highly dangerous to the persons or lives of one or more persons known or unknown, the law ipso 'facto imposes as a' public duty, the obligation to exercise such care and skill.” [Van Winkle v. Insurance Co., 19 Atl. 472.]

In Geismann v. Electric Co., 173 Mo. 674, the Supreme Court said: “Electricity is one of the most dangerous agencies ever discovered by human science, and owing to that fact it was the duty of the electric light company to use every protection which was accessible to insulate its wires at all points where people have the right to go, and to use the utmost care to keep them so; and for personal injuries to a person in a place where he has a right to be without negligence upon his part contributing directly thereto, it is liable in damages.” [McLaughlin v. Electric Light Co., 100 Ky. 173.] In Winkelman v. Electric Light Co., 110 Mo. App. 184, we said: “Considering the noiseless, hidden and destructive power of electricity, a reasonable effort to control it is nothing short of the utmost effort —nothing less than the utmost would be a reasonable effort.” And, later, in Byerly v. Light, Power & Ice Co., 130 Mo. App. l. c. 601, we reiterated the rule in the following language: “The utility of this agency is fully appreciated by the courts and no desire is entertained to restrict its use, but the fact that when it is not kept closely confined within appointed channels, its tendency to break loose and its capacity for evil are so great, impels the courts to lay down the rule that persons who engage in the business of transmitting highly destructive currents of electricity must exercise the highest degree of care to prevent their escape from the carrying -wires.”

This rule impels us to declare that if defendant, at any time before the injury, had reason to anticipate, while employing the highest degree of care, that persons rightfully on the roof of the building might come [280]*280into contact with the wire, it became its duty to exercise the highest degree of care to repair or replace the defective wire, and a breach of such duty would constitute negligence.

It is argued by defendant that the boy was a trespasser on the roof, .or, at any rate, was a mere licensee and that in either case, defendant had no reason to anticipate his presence there and, therefore, was under no duty to guard against injuring him.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 81, 136 Mo. App. 274, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-consolidated-light-power-ice-co-moctapp-1909.