Guthrie v. City of St. Charles

152 S.W.2d 91, 347 Mo. 1175, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 676
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by116 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 91 (Guthrie v. City of St. Charles) 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
Guthrie v. City of St. Charles, 152 S.W.2d 91, 347 Mo. 1175, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 676 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

The respondent, a boy 15 years old suing by next friend, recovered a judgment for $8,000 damages against the appellant City of St. Charles, for injuries sustained in an explosion of sewer gas emanating from a sanitary sewer into the basement of the home of Fred Hirsch, his neighbor. There had been a heavy rain that evening and surface water found its way into the sewer and thence flooded basements in the vicinity. The respondent and other children were on an expedition to rescue dogs, cats and fowls from the inundated area. They ventured to the top steps leading into the Hirsch basement with a lighted lantern. An explosion followed injuring respondent and others of the children, three of them fatally.

On this appeal the City makes three assignments: (1) that the trial court should have sustained its demurrer to the evidence, as requested at the close of the whole case; (2) that the court erred in giving respondent's Instruction No. 1; (3) that the verdict for $8,000 was excessive. Its basic contentions are that the verdict was speculative and conjectural, since there was no substantial evidence showing the explosion resulted from any cause for which the City was legally responsible, as against other possible causes for which it was not liable; and that because of the extraordinary nature of the casualty the city authorities in the exercise of reasonable care were not bound to have anticipated it.

Two sanitary sewers were involved. One, called the old sewer, was laid in 1906. A new relief sewer was built in 1929, starting from a connection with the old one at Ninth Street and Kingshighway, and closely paralleling it until the two rejoined at Fifth and Morgan streets about nine blocks further down. For the first four blocks of this distance the old sewer was constructed of 8 inch pipe; through the next three blocks, of 10 inch pipe; and for the remaining two blocks of 12 inch pipe. The new sewer was built entirely of 12 inch pipe. Thence to the Missouri River there was only a single 12 inch outlet line.

The Hirsch home was located about four blocks below the beginning point of the two parallel sanitary sewers and was served by the new one. For some ten days before the explosion a manhole on the old sewer two blocks below said beginning point had been left uncovered by certain W.P.A. workmen for their personal convenience, with the consent of the city engineer. They were engaged in the construction of a storm sewer, which was not connected with the sanitary sewers. *Page 1182 But when the heavy rain fell shortly before the explosion it covered the surrounding area with surface water, which was augmented by water gushing from the uncompleted storm sewer, so that the open W.P.A. manhole (as we shall call it) on the old sanitary sewer was submerged to a depth of two feet. This flooded the old sewer. But the new sewer also was flooded and regurgitated sewage into the Hirsch basement to a depth of several feet. This occurred although there were no open manholes on the new sewer, and its only connections with the old sewer were four blocks above and five blocks below the Hirsch home. These flood waters pushed ahead of them the gas that exploded.

The big question of fact in the case was, how did the flood waters get from the old sewer into the new sewer — or, to put it differently, was the open W.P.A. manhole on the old sewer a producing cause of the explosion on the new sewer. The city contended the flooding of the new sewer resulted from a wholly independent cause, namely an obstruction therein two blocks below the Hirsch home, which backed up the sewage in the new sewer and filled it to capacity, so that the flood waters in the old sewer could not enter the new sewer opposite the Hirsch home, and therefore could not have been a proximate cause of the explosion in the Hirsch basement. In addition to an assignment of negligence in permitting the W.P.A. manhole to remain uncovered, five other assignments of negligence were pleaded in respondent's petition charging faulty construction of the sanitary sewers, and failure to clean and ventilate them in specified manners.

At the close of all the evidence the appellant City offered an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which the court refused. After the overruling of the demurrer the respondent submitted its case to the jury on an Instruction No. 1 which hypothesized negligence in two respects only: (1) permitting large and unusual quantities of sewage to remain in the parallel sewers and to generate explosive sewer gas; (2) permitting the W.P.A. manhole to remain uncovered, whereby flood waters entered the old sewer and thence backed up into the Hirsch basement causing the explosion. Appellant assigned error in its motion for new trial to the overruling of its demurrer to the evidence, and renews that assignment in its brief here.

[1] Appellant contends, first, that since respondent's instruction submitted only two issues, all other charges of negligence in the petition were abandoned. That is the law.* Next it asserts that the first of these two issues — about permitting sewage to remain in the sewers, *Page 1183 and gas to form — must be disregarded because it was broader than the petition. We shall take up that question when we come to consider the instruction. Finally, appellant says that with these charges of negligence eliminated, the propriety of the circuit court's order overruling the demurrer to the evidence must be adjudged by this court solely on the remaining issue: whether there was substantial evidence showing the city guilty of actionable negligence as specified in the petition and instruction, in permitting the W.P.A. manhole to remain uncovered.

[2] Answering that their contention, respondent asserts that since the City's demurrer to the evidence was general we here in reviewing the order overruling it must disregard hissubsequent abandonment of the five other assignments pleaded in the petition and put ourselves in the position of the trial court when the demurrer was submitted. Respondent further maintains that appellant's assignment in its motion for new trial and brief here, predicating error on the overruling of the demurrer, is not sufficient to raise the point that the single issue on which he (respondent) submitted his case to the jury was unsupported by substantial evidence. All this is on the theory that when the demurrer was interposed all six assignments of negligence were still in the case, and the circuit court may have thought some of the five assignments later abandoned were supported by substantial evidence — in which event it had to overrule the demurrer even though it believed the assignment on which the cause was subsequently submitted did not have evidential support.

These contentions are sustained by Gray v. Kurn, 345 Mo. 1027, 1041-2 (3, 4), 137 S.W.2d 558, 566 (6, 7), which respondent stresses. And that used to be the law. The rule formerly was that if a defendant wanted to save his point as to the insufficiency of the evidence on each pleaded assignment, he must demur to the evidence on each issue separately by requesting appropriate withdrawal instructions; and that he waived any error in the overruling of his general demurrer to the evidence by offering converse instructions on the issues submitted. [Torrance v. Pryor, 210 S.W. 430, 432(4).]

But the Torrance case was expressly overruled by Elkin v. St. Louis Pub. Serv. Co., 335 Mo. 951, 954,

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.2d 91, 347 Mo. 1175, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guthrie-v-city-of-st-charles-mo-1941.