Kramer v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.

279 S.W. 43, 311 Mo. 369, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 835
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 43 (Kramer v. Kansas City Power & 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
Kramer v. Kansas City Power & Light Co., 279 S.W. 43, 311 Mo. 369, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 835 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

This case was tried under an amended petition filed on February 20, 1923.

(1) It alleges that defendant is a corporation engaged in distributing electrical current in Kansas City, Missouri; that in the prosecution of its business, it erected, owned and maintained wooden poles in said city for the purpose of carrying wires used to conduct said electrical current about said city, and more particularly a pole used for said purpose, erected and maintained on the east side of Oak Street, between Third and Fourth streets, in said city; that at all of said times plaintiff was in the employ of defendant as a lineman; that on or about April 3, 1920, while in the pursuit of his employment, he was ordered and directed by defendant to climb said pole; that while so climbing the same, and using one of the iron steps driven and placed in and maintained on said pole by defendant for the use and convenience of plaintiff and other workmen in climbing said pole, said step, which was old and rusty and not driven or placed far enough into said pole to maintain or bear the weight of plaintiff, broke and caused him to fall and sustain the injuries complained of. It is charged that defendant negligently caused said step to be driven and placed in said *Page 375 pole not far enough to make it reasonably safe and secure from breaking under a strain, which the defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known that it would be put to by linemen in its employ in using said step to climb said pole; that defendant knew, or should have known, that for said reason it was not safe and secure, and that if it should break would cause the lineman to fall; that while using said step on or about the above date it broke, because of said negligence, and caused him to fall and sustain the injuries complained of herein.

(2) It further alleges, in substance, that appellant, with knowledge of the condition of said step, was guilty of negligence in failing to inform respondent of its condition.

(3) It charges, that said pole step was old, worn, rusty and of insufficient strength for the use of linemen; that defendant knew, or should have known, of its condition, in time before plaintiff's injury to have replaced same with a suitable step, or to have warned plaintiff of its unsafe condition.

(4) It alleges that appellant was negligent in respect to foregoing matters, and that plaintiff was injured by reason of said negligence.

(5) It alleges that appellant was guilty of negligence, which caused plaintiff's injury, in directing him to climb said pole, when it knew, or ought to have known, that said pole step was unsafe, etc.

The petition sets out the injuries complained of, which will be considered, if necessary, in the opinion.

The answer to said amended petition admits the incorporation of defendant, denies every other allegation in said petition, pleads assumption of risk and contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff in failing to observe and test the pole step in question.

The reply contains a denial of the new matter pleaded in said answer.

George Welday, a resident of Kansas City, Kansas, testified in behalf of respondent, by deposition, that on *Page 376 April 3, 1920, he was employed by this appellant in Kansas City, Missouri, and knew the plaintiff, William Kramer; that he was present when plaintiff was injured, at Fourth and Oak streets, on above date; that he and plaintiff, with other members of the gang, went there to repair an arc wire that was broken down; that they looked over the job and concluded that they needed a span wire to splice the one on the pole; that he climbed the first pole north of Fourth Street on Oak Street, where Kramer fell; that Kramer followed him up the pole; that there were two arms on the pole; that when he (witness) got to the bottom arm he stopped, and plaintiff was right below him; that plaintiff stopped, and was told by witness to wait a minute; that he (witness) went on up through the bottom wires on the bottom arm to the top arm, and put his safety just below the top arm; that plaintiff waited there until witness got set; that he then stepped around to the south side of the pole to come up on that side and, as he placed his foot on a step, it gave way with him; that said pole is about fifty feet above the ground, and was a wooden pole; that it was equipped with iron steps, which commenced about twelve feet from the ground; that these steps were about eighteen inches apart on each side of the pole, north and south; that it was snowing, and there was snow on the pole and steps; that they were the regulation iron pole steps; that when Kramer started up, after the conversation with witness, he used the steps; that he was on the south side of the pole when the step gave way with him; that this step was possibly six feet from the bottom cross-arm; that he (plaintiff) put his left foot on the step that gave way; that witness at this time was at the top cross-arm, waiting for plaintiff, and was looking south; that he saw plaintiff put his foot on the step, and saw the latter give away with him; that plaintiff grabbed at the pole, but missed it and fell about ten feet, when he caught a broken wire hanging down from the top cross-arm; that when he got his full weight on it, the wire broke at the insulator and plaintiff fell to *Page 377 the pavement; that plaintiff was then carried away in an ambulance; that he saw the step which broke with Kramer, lying there in the snow on the street, about seven feet from the pole; that the snow was probably an inch and a half or two inches deep; that they did not complete the work on the day of the accident; that he saw the pole two days thereafter, and examined it; that he climbed the pole up to where the iron step had broken off, and looked at the place; that part of the broken pole-step was in the pole, like it had been driven in; that the piece in there was flush with the pole; that is, it was even with the outside of the pole; that the pole seemed to be solid, and there was no depression around the piece of step that was still in the pole.

On cross-examination witness testified in substance that these were regulation iron pole steps; that they were in use by telephone companies and all companies that have poles use steps like these; that he and Kramer were there about ten minutes before the accident; and that both he and Kramer had on their climbers; that there was snow on the ground and the temperature was freezing at the time of the accident; that he (plaintiff) was using his climbers, and stepped on to the step which broke and let him fall to the ground.

On re-examination witness again testified that the break appeared to him as being flush with the pole.

Jess Stinson, a witness for plaintiff, found the broken step about six or eight feet from the pole where plaintiff fell, identified the same and it was marked as plaintiff's Exhibit 1. Witness measured Exhibit 1 and testified that it was 6¼ inches from the inside of the flange of said step to the point where it was broken off; that from the outside of the flange to the point where the step was broken off, it was a fraction over 6¾ inches; that he had been a lineman for about eighteen years, and continued as such until 1917 when he was hurt. Over the objection of defendant, witness was permitted to testify that it was customary to measure the distance that a step should be left outside of the pole by a hand *Page 378 axe about 4½ inches wide. He was shown the balance of the step, marked Exhibit 2, and identified same as part of Exhibit 1.

J.R.

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 43, 311 Mo. 369, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-kansas-city-power-light-co-mo-1925.