Helton v. Hawkins

290 S.W. 91, 221 Mo. App. 93, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 76
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 290 S.W. 91 (Helton v. Hawkins) 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
Helton v. Hawkins, 290 S.W. 91, 221 Mo. App. 93, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 76 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

*96 BAILEY, J.

This is an action for damages growing out of injuries to the person and property of plaintiff caused by a fire in a garage in which he was employed as a mechanic, at Ash Grove. The only grounds of negligence alleged in the petition are couched in the following language: “That on the said 11th day of October, 1924, and on the forenoon of that day, the defendant came into the said garage, and, coming back to where the plaintiff was working, engaged him in conversation; that the plaintiff at that time was standing at or near a tank of gasoline and was cleaning his hands by washing them in gasoline which was running from a container or tank down into a basin; that while plaintiff was so engaged, and while he was in the exercise of ordinary care and caution, the defendant carelessly, negligently and recklessly struck a match, and carelessly, negligently and recklessly threw the said lighted match into and against the said gasoline, causing it to ignite and explode.

Plaintiff further states that when the gasoline was so caused to ignite and explode, that it caused the flames and fire to extend over plaintiff’s hands, arms and body, igniting his clothing and burning his flesh, etc.” The answer was a general denial. The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $1750 and from the judgment rendered thereon, defendant lias appealed.

The principle point raised on this appeal relates to the failure of the trial court to give the jury a peremptory instruction to find for defendant. "We shall, therefore, set out the evidence most favorable to plaintiff’s case, having in mind the rule that all such evidence, for the purpose of the demurrer, shall be taken as true and that plaintiff is entitled to every inference reasonably deducible therefrom but that the evidence and inferences favorable to defendant shall be disregarded. There were but two witnesses to the accident, plaintiff and defendant. Plaintiff testified that on a certain day in October, 1924, he was working as a mechanic for the Wilkerson Motor Company in tlieir garage at Ash Grove; that at that time he knew defendant Frank Hawkins; that on this particular day Hawkins came into the garage at which time a co-employee, Clarence Wagner, and plain-' tiff’s wife, were present; that the garage was about thirty feet in width, east and west, and something over 100 feet in length; that the back twenty or twenty-five feet of the garage floor was eighteen or twenty inches lower than at the front end; that a little north of this offset and against the east wall of the building stood a gasoline tank *97 on a trestle high enough so a five gallon can could get under it; that in the rear end of the building was a generator for charging batteries from which wires were run to a battery table located about twelve feet south of the gasoline tank; that there was a work bench or table used to set motors on, which was located in the neighborhood of ten feet west of the gasoline tank and on farther west was another work bench; that on the east end of the work bench used to set motors on was fastened a motor support which projected over the east end of the bench “twenty-four inches or better;” that, “When Mr. Hawkins came in that morning I was standing down on the back in the offset portion of the floor, the lower part of it, about half way back. I met him at this work bench which I say was directly west of the gasoline tank. We engaged in conversation there. It was just general conversation. Then the conversation come up about the last as to a trip I had made out to his house to see about his tractor — what was wrong with it — and I went out there; and he wanted to pay me for the trip, and I told him he didn’t owe me anything; he had taken out some money out of his pocket and offered me a dollar already, and I refused it; and, in the meantime, while we was talking there he stood there and filled up his pipe and held it in one hand like that (indicating) and he put the dollar back in his pocket and stood there and talked awhile longer, and said he would rather pay me; and then I started over to the gasoline tank to wash my hands, and I turned the faucet on into the crock below.

‘ ‘ The faucet was in the west end of the tank, and at the lower side. The tank was elevated something like fifteen or twenty inches above the floor. He was still standing near the end of this work bench, directly west of the gasoline tank when I turned on this faucet. I just stepped around the south end of it and squatted down and began to wash my hands. He was standing almost directly west of the tank where I was washing my hands.
“Q. Now, while you were there washing your hands, what, if anything, did he do? A. Well, he turned slightly towards me, and said, ‘Well, I would rather pay you.’ I told him I didn’t care for any pay for it as I didn’t do the truck any good and couldn’t get back out there to fix it. He turned, and as he turned he took the match, took a match out of his pocket and struck it on that motor'' support that was on the work bench there sticking out from the end, and he just turned there and as he started to leave he just • — lit his pipe as lie was turning — and give the match a toss slightly over his shoulder, towards me (indicating) — come for the gas.
“Q. Now, what did you do, Loyd, when you saw this match coming toward the gasoline? A. I started to jump — to get up on my feet so I could jump. At that time I had both hand and arms *98 thoroughly covered with that gasoline. I raised and tried to jump west.
“Q. What happened? A. I was afire before I ever got straightened out.
“Q. What part of you was afire? A. My arm; clothing.
“Q. Where was he standing, now, when you got up after the flash came and you caught fire? You say you jumped to the west? A. Yes, sir.
‘‘Q. Where was he standing at that time when you got up where you could see him? A. Well, he probably was about five or six feet away from me. I run towards him. My arms were up like this (illustrating), they was a solid mass of flames. I asked him to ‘put me out,’ but he did not. He says, ‘Keep away from me.’ I do not know what became of him. He did not help put out the flames on me or do anything about helping extinguishing the fire on my body. I were burning so up here, and my hands, I stooped over and doubled up and put my hands between my legs and drug most of it out that way. I did not entirely succeed in putting out the fire on my arms and hands. Clarence Wagner the other mechanician employed in the garage threw a jumper over the places burning on my leg and places on my arm. At the time of the fire my sleeves were rolled slightly above my elbows. After Clarence and I extinguished the fire on my body I run out the front door and hollered to a gentleman down in front of the Ford agency, told him to call the fire wagon. The fire finally consumed the entire building.”

On cross-examination he testified that he had been smoking in the garage that day and that everybody smoked in there so far as he knew but that he did not have a pipe in his mouth or cigarette when the accident occurred; that defendant was standing a little north of the work bench but didn’t remember whether he was east of it; that he struck the match on the motor support. His examination then proceeded as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 91, 221 Mo. App. 93, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helton-v-hawkins-moctapp-1927.