Donk v. Francis

174 S.W.2d 840, 351 Mo. 1053, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 497
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 1, 1943
DocketNo. 38440.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 840 (Donk v. Francis) 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
Donk v. Francis, 174 S.W.2d 840, 351 Mo. 1053, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 497 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

*1055 GANTT, J.

Personal injury action under the res ipsa loquitur rule for damages in the sum of $15,000. Plaintiff claims injury by inhaling and breathing noxious fumes escaping from the central refrigerator compressor and a coal burning furnace located in the basement of the apartment building in which she resided. Defendant George Tilles Investment Company owned the building, and plaintiff alleged that defendant Franeis-Perry-Ruth Real Estate Company [841] was the agent of the owner and, as such, managed the building.

The petition alleged that for a long period of time defendants negligently permitted the emission of carbon monoxide gas from the furnace and the waste products thereof, and negligently permitted the emission of sulphur dioxide fumes from the central refrigerating compressor; that as a result large quantities of gas and fumes entered the apartment occupied by plaintiff and that she was thereby permanently injured.

The answers were general denials. Judgment on a verdict for defendants and plaintiff appealed. There was evidence for plaintiff tending to show facts as follows:

Plaintiff and husband occupied a first floor apartment of a twelve family apartment building in St. Louis. They moved to the apartment June 1, 1940. The tenants are furnished refrigeration, heat, electricity and gas. At nine p. m. on February 3, 1941, plaintiff went to a small room in the apartment to rest pending the return of her husband, who was out for the evening. The window in the small room was open against a ventilator. She was awakened about eleven p. m. by a choking sensation. The room was full of gas with the odor of sulphur. At that time the husband arrived. He entered the apartment with a handkerchief over his nose. He then assisted the plaintiff from the apartment; . On entering the hall they saw Mrs. Siegfried, a third floor tenant leaning out a front hall, window. Plaintiff offered to prove as res- gestae that Mrs. Siegfried said: “The hall’s full of gas up here.’’ The court sustained defendants’ objection to the statement a® res ¡gestae.

Mrs. Siegfried descended to the first floor and went with plaintiff to awaken Charles Rohrback, the janitor of the building who resided across the street. They were unable to awaken him. The janitor *1056 in the adjacent apartment building awakened Rohrback who came to the apartment in a few minutes and went to the third floor and then to the basement. Plaintiff did not talk to him that night. The windows of the apartment were open for a while, but the gas did not entirely disappear. Some of the windows were open for the best part of the night. Both plaintiff and husband had a headache in the morning. They smelled sulphur and gas in the room. They were annoyed with gas the first day they moved to the building, and this condition existed during the time they occupied the apartment. They complained to the janitor, who did nothing. In July, August and September there was gas in the apartment, and when the furnace was started there was more gas. The apartment they occupied was above the furnace. Plaintiff also made complaints to Dorsey Ruth who collected the rent. The day after she was injured in the chest, back and kidneys by inhaling gas, the janitor moved a refrigerator.

Defendants inquired of plaintiff with reference to other claims she made for damages. Plaintiff objected. The objection was overruled. She then stated that prior to the present injury she made a claim for damages against the street car company and later made a claim for damages against the city. They were small claims and settled without litigation. The family doctor in the instant case also treated her for the other injuries, and her attorney in the instant case also represented her in the making and settlement of those claims. At this point the attorney for the defendants stated: “Your lawyer, doctor and you seem to work pretty well together”. Plaintiff objected and charged counsel with attempting to prejudice the jury against the plaintiff and asked that he be reprimanded. Thereupon defendants’ attorney admitted that he should not have made the remark. He apologized to the court and the jury. On the request of attorney for plaintiff, the court directed the jury to disregard said remark. Plaintiff’s attorney then asked the court to declare a mistrial. The request was overruled.

At other times the husband also noticed gas in the apartment but never so much as on the night of February 3, 1941. He opened the windows but could not remove all the gas from the apartment. The next morning he awakened with a “splitting headache.”

The man who moved plaintiff and husband from the apartment on the 12th of February, 1941, called to bid for the moving in the early part of February, 1941. At that time he noticed a sulphur odor in the apartment.

The family doctor diagnosed plaintiff’s affliction as nephritis. It was his opinion that carbon dioxide caused the nephritis. It also was his opinion that sulphur dioxide could have caused the nephritis.

Ón January 2, 1941, the man who serviced the refrigeration in the building [842] tightened a loose belt. On February 1, 1941, he disconnected a refrigerator on the second floor by closing a valve. *1057 on the gas line in the basement, pumping out the gas from the units on the line, cutting the pipes and flaring them and then again opening the valve in the basement. He moved the refrigerator from the apartment to install a refrigerator owned by a tenant moving to the apartment. Sulphur dioxide is used in this system of refrigeration. It is pumped through the system by the compressor in the basement. On February 4, 1941, he again went to the building and put sulphur dioxide into the system because five tenants were complaining of “frost back”. This occurs when the gas is not under sufficient pressure. In other words, the system is short of sulphur dioxide. . The refrigeration service record of the building follows:

“1-2-41 — 1 hour- — Warren—belt loose on refrigerator — tightened fan — oiled motor — cleaned condensor—
“3-15-41 — -2 hours — -Dickey—Apartment 1 — removed and cleaned coil and strainer, put on Allen Set screws on motor and tightened.
“2-1-41 — second floor, apartment 3 — 2y2 hours — Dickey disconnected box and pumped out coil — Valve bad and couldn’t close — disconnected and plugged both lines.
“2-4-41 — 2y2 Hours — Dickey—freezing 5 frost backs causing machine to run continually, added gas to eliminate frost backs.”

Sulphur dioxide is used in most refrigeration units. It has an odor similar to rotten eggs and is easily detected. The service man had several employees in his shop and no injury resulted from breathing the gas, which is always in the air. On his visits to the building he fqund no evidence of leaks or escaping gas. On February 4, 1941, he went to the building and examined the plugs on the second floor. They were all soldered and no gas was escaping.' Dirt will cause' a leak. He, at no time, found a leak in the system.

The janitor served the building and another building for about six years. He served the building in which plaintiff resided fifteen minutes every two hours. At five p. m.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 840, 351 Mo. 1053, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donk-v-francis-mo-1943.