Gaines v. Property Servicing Company

276 S.W.2d 169, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 713
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 10, 1955
Docket43988
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 276 S.W.2d 169 (Gaines v. Property Servicing Company) 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
Gaines v. Property Servicing Company, 276 S.W.2d 169, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 713 (Mo. 1955).

Opinion

DALTON, Presiding Judge.

Action for damages for personal injuries sustained on April 24, 1952, as the result of a fire in defendant’s three story apa'rtment building which was not equipped with a fire escape as required by Chapter 320, Section 320.010 et seq., RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for $18,500. Defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff and one Clara Burns had rented and occupied for some two years an apartment consisting of one room and a kitchenette on the third floor of a five family apartment building owned and operated by defendant and located at 103 N. Channing Avenue in the City of St. Louis. The apartment was at the front (east part) of the building. Another tenant, Pearl Hodges, occupied an apartment on the same floor at the rear (west part) of the building. There were two apartments on the second floor and one on the first floor, the latter being occupied by Roosevelt Haley and his wife. The building was over fifty years old. There was no evidence as to when it was built, or when it was changed .from a single family to a multiple dwelling. There was no evidence that the building had been rebuilt or altered. The defendant had owned the building for some time prior to the date of the fire, but, since it acquired the property, no alterations had been made. A wooden stairway located along the north wall of the building led up from a front vestibule near the northeast corner of the building to the third floor at a point near the entrance to plaintiff’s apartment. A hallway extended west from the top of the stairs to the apartment of Pearl Hodges at the rear of the building. There was no fire escape on the outside of the building and no brick or concrete fire escape inside the building. There was no access to the upper floors of the building except by the one wooden stairway.

About 5:30 p. in., April 24, 1952, plaintiff and Clara Burns were in their apartment and Pearl Hodges was in hers. Clara Burns then left her apartment and went down the stairs to a point'between the first and second floors. At that time she saw Roosevelt Haley with a five gallon coal oil can sprinkling a fluid about his apartment and over the hallway on the first floor. The fluid was burning and she last saw Haley backing up the hallway as he sprinkled the fluid about. She promptly notified the tenants on the second and third floors. Pearl Hodges,1 when first warned of the fire, came to plaintiff’s apartment, but later returned to her own. Plaintiff came out of his apartment, saw the fire and then with Clara Burns, re-entered their apartment. There was no other place to go, the whole stairway was in flames and the fire and heat' were coming up the stairs and hallway. One could not see the second floor for the flames. The draft from an open front door was carrying the fire rapidly up the stairs. Plaintiff knocked the window glass out of a window in the kitchenette of his apartment and, when the fire reached the kitchenette and plaintiff received burns on his body and left arm he and Clara Burns were forced to jump from the open window onto the roof of an adjoining one story building. Both sustained serious injuries.

Most of the fire was concentrated in the front of the building and went up the stairway and stairwell to the third floor. The stair bannisters were burned off, the steps charred, the rooms on the third floor were damaged by fire and about half the roof of the building was destroyed. Roosevelt Haley was indicted and tried and, later, pleaded guilty to setting the building afire arid received a sentence to the state penitentiary.

Appellant first contends that “the court erred in overruling defendant’s request fori a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence because the evidence fails to show that the negligence charged against defendant was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries’.” Appellant argues that “plaintiff’s evidence established defendant’s negligence ás a condition or remote cause of *172 plaintiff's injury”; that “the intentional, wrongful, criminal act of a responsible human agency constituted an independent efficient intervening cause of plaintiff’s injuries, breaking the chain of causes between the negligence cha'rged against defendant and plaintiff’s injuries”; that “the negligence charged against defendant and the wilful, intentional, criminal act of a third person in setting fire to the building were not joint and concurrent causes of plaintiff’s injuries”; that “defendant could not reasonably have anticipated the wilful, intentional, criminal act of a third person in setting fire to the building in question”; and that “the fact that defendant could not reasonably anticipate the wilful, intentional, criminal act of a third person in setting fire to the building rendered the negligence charged against defendant remote and not a proximate-cause of plaintiff’s injury.”

Appellant further argues that “plaintiff’s evidence shows that the act of negligence charged against defendant (failure to provide a fire escape) could not cause plaintiff’s injury alone”; that “the injury to plaintiff herein resulted directly from the intervening intentional criminal act of one Haley in setting fire to the building”; and that “the conduct of this defendant did not in any manner induce or bring about the wrongful act of the third party.” Appellant says that, “while defendant could have anticipated that the building might be ignited and burned as a result of the inadvertent carelessness of some person, or due to defective wiring, or any of the causes that usually and customarily cause fires in buildings, defendant could not have foreseen or deemed it probable that a third person would maliciously or wantonly set fire to the building as was done in this case.”

Appellant relies upon the general rule stated in 38 Am.Jur. 728, Negligence, Sec. 71, as follows: “* * * that when, between negligence and the occurrence of an injury, there intervenes a wilful, malicious and criminal act of a third person which causes the injury but was not intended by the negligent person and could not have been foreseen by him, the causal chain between the negligence and the accident is broken. Wrongful acts of independent third persons, not actually intended by the defendant, are not regarded by the law as natural consequences of his wrong, and he is not bound to anticipate the general probability of such acts, any more than a particular act by this or that individual. * * * ” And see Sira v. Wabash R. Co., 115 Mo. 127, 21 S.W. 905, 907; Wecker v. Grafeman-McIntosh Ice Cream Co., 326 Mo. 451, 31 S.W.2d 974, 977; De Moss v. Kansas City Rys. Co., 296 Mo. 526, 246 S.W. 566, 567; Wood v. Wells, Mo.Sup., 270 S. W. 332, 336; Kennedy v. Independent Quarry & Construction Co., 316 Mo. 782, 291 S.W. 475, 476, 481.

Respondent, on the other hand, relies upon an exception to the general rule as follows : “ * * * it is universally agreed that the mere fact that the intervention of a responsible human being can be traced between the defendant’s wrongful act and the injury complained of will not absolve him. For example, a defendant is not relieved from liability by the fact that the direct and immediate cause of the injury to the plaintiff was the act of a third p'erson, where the defendant was in duty bound to protect the plaintiff against cm injury from that source.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W.2d 169, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-property-servicing-company-mo-1955.