Harrison v. Kansas City Electric Light Co.

93 S.W. 951, 195 Mo. 606, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 276
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 20, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 93 S.W. 951 (Harrison v. Kansas City Electric Light 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
Harrison v. Kansas City Electric Light Co., 93 S.W. 951, 195 Mo. 606, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 276 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

— This is an action under the statute for $5,000 damages for the death of plaintiff’s husband, on the 24th of April, 1902, caused by an electric shock from the defendant’s wire in Kansas City, Missouri. The action is by the widow. A prior action had been brought by the widow within six months after the death, in which the plaintiff suffered a non-suit, and this action was brought within one year thereafter, as allowed by the statute. There was a judgment for the plaintiff for $5,000, and the defendant appealed.

The issues.

The petition alleges the relation of the plaintiff to the deceased, and his death on the day stated; the fact of such prior suit, nonsuit, and the institution of this action within the statutory time; the incorporation of the defendant; that it owned a certain electric powerhouse and electric light circuits connected therewith in Kansas City, used by it for the purpose of lighting the streets of said city; that it was the duty of the defendant to-maintain and operate the same, as far as ordinary and reasonable care would avail therefor, so that the same should be in a reasonably safe condition and not liable to endanger lives and property of others. The negligence charged in the petition is as follows: [612]*612that upon said circuit becoming grounded at any other place or places, a heavy and dangerous volume and charge of electricity was liable to pass from sr.id circuit to and through any person or persons who might be so situated that said charge of electricity should pass through the body of such person or persons and through the earth in what is commonly known as a ‘ short circuit’ and thereon back to said circuit through such other grounded connection or contact, to the serious or fatal injury of the person so affected, and who are liable to come into contact with the current so recklessly released and discharged from said circuit and its proper course, without knowledge or notice that said current was being so diverted and discharged; that by reason of said circuit being so grounded on or about and prior to April 24, 1902, at some place or places to plaintiff unknown, conditions so arose that the wire of said circuit at and near the place of residence of the plaintiff and her deceased husband, came in contact with trees near and adjacent and contiguous to which the defendant had carelessly strung the wire of such circuit, so as to burn said trees, including a tree upon the premises of the plaintiff and her deceased husband; that the volume of electricity passed along the wire or wires of said circuit or circuits-was such as when diverted and passed through an inferior conductor, such as the wood of trees or the human body, would in passing through the same, burn said wood, and injure or destroy the life of such human being or beings.

[611]*611‘ ‘ That on and for sometime prior to about the 24th day of April, 1902, a certain of said arc light circuits owned and operated by the defendant company, and known, as plaintiff is informed, as circuit No. 32, was in a. dangerous and defective condition, in that it was ‘grounded’ — that is to say, that on account of defects in the insulation of said circuit, the wire or wires on said circuit had come into electrical contact with the earth at some place or places to plaintiff unknown, so

[612]*612‘ ‘ That on or about the 24th day of April, 1902, the said circuit being ‘grounded’ as aforesaid, at some place or places to the plaintiff unknown, and other than at the place immediately hereinafter described, upon the premises of the plaintiff and her deceased husband, Harold, the infant son of the deceased, who knew nothing of the danger of electricity, having discovered that one of the trees upon the premises of the plaintiff and [613]*613her deceased husband had been burned by the contact of such tree with the wires of said circuit, which was defectively and insufficiently insulated through the carelessness and negligence of the defendant in locating same, so that same was liable to abrasion and destruction, in order to save said tree from further injury, at about the hour of 4:30 o’clock in the afternoon, connected to the wire of said circuit of the defendant, at a place where same was endangering and injuring said tree through such defective insulation, a small copper wire, and continued said copper wire into contact with the ground; that upon the said tree aforesaid, there was suspended a swing for the pleasure of the plaintiff’s children, constructed of a hanging loop of wire cable suspended from two points of support on a limb of said trees, and supporting a wooden seat in which said children, and others, were accustomed to swing; that said wire cable, so made into said swing, was longer than was necessary for such purpose, and the loose end thereof was wound around the limb of said tree, and down to and around the trunk of said tree, before reaching the ground; that said Harold, after so connecting said copper wire, as aforesaid, conducted the same from said tree down and around the trunk of said tree, so as to bring same in contact with the wire of said cable and bring said cable into electrical contact with the wire of said circuit; that said copper wire being so conducted to and into the ground, the charge of electricity discharged from said circuit passed harmlessly along and through said wire, down and into the ground and through the ground to some .other place or places to the plaintiff unknown, to where the circuit was grounded, back into said circuit and through the same returned to the power-house of the defendant. That about the hour of 7:25 o ’clock in the evening of said day, said Harold noticed that said copper wire or the wire of said circuit of the defendant, was again burning said tree where same came into contact therewith, and in an [614]*614endeavor to prevent the further injury to said tree, cut off said copper wire between the ground and said tree, so as to leave said copper wire and the said wire of said cable of which said swing was constructed, in electrical contact with the wire of said circuit, but without electrical connection with the ground other than through the insufficient and poor conductor which the trunk of said tree and the roots thereof made ; that almost immediately thereafter, the plaintiff’s deceased husband came out into said yard for the proper purpose of speáking to or associating with the children playing about the same, and in entire ignorance of the electrical connection of the cable to said swing, as aforesaid, with said circuit of the defendant, placed his hand in contact with said cable, whereupon said Harrison became part of an electrical connection between said cable and the earth, and the circuit of the defendant, at such other place or places where same had been negligently allowed to become and remain grounded, so that a powerful charge of electricity passed from the wire of said circuit adjacent to said tree, through said copper wire, the said cable and the body of said Harrison, down and into the ground and through the same, through said grounded current connection elsewhere, and back into the circuit of the defendant, causing the instant death of said Harrison.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W. 951, 195 Mo. 606, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-kansas-city-electric-light-co-mo-1906.