Lowes v. Union Electric Company

405 S.W.2d 506, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 613
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1966
Docket32235
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 405 S.W.2d 506 (Lowes v. Union Electric Company) 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
Lowes v. Union Electric Company, 405 S.W.2d 506, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 613 (Mo. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

CLEMENS, Commissioner.

This appeal challenges the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ evidence to make a submissible case. The plaintiffs, husband and wife, had spent four years building a new home. When almost completed, it was destroyed by a fire which they attributed to defendant’s negligence. Plaintiffs pleaded and submitted their case on the dual theory that the defendant had negligently maintained its wires and the attachment thereof to plaintiffs’ house and had negligently maintained a defective transformer. The defendant stood on its motion for a directed verdict. Plaintiffs got a $15,000 verdict and judgment, from which defendant appeals. The core of the controversy is plaintiffs’ contention that the fire was caused by a defect in defendant’s electrical equipment.

In reviewing the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ evidence we follow the principles that they are entitled to all reasonable inferences arising from the circumstances shown, that the precise injury complained of need not have been foreseen if the injury was the natural and probable consequence of an act or omission of the defendant, and that plaintiffs are , bound by the uncon-tradicted testimony of their own witnesses. Boyd v. Terminal R. Ass’n, Mo., 289 S.W.2d 33 [1, 3], 59 A.L.R.2d 1222; Klotsch v. P. F. Collier & Son Corp., 349 Mo. 40 (banc), 159 S.W.2d 589 [7].

We will describe plaintiffs’ house and the parties’ electrical facilities as they were before the fire, during the fire, and after the fire.

Before the Fire. The plaintiffs’ three-bedroom, frame house was on a one-acre lot in a large tract subdivision. Mr. Lowes had built and wired the house himself; it was completed except for hanging the interior doors and the door to the basement garage. The house faced east and sat back from the road about a hundred feet. Under the northeast corner of the house there was a basement garage, its entrance facing the roadway. The basement wall on the north and east sides of the dwelling was made of concrete blocks, with an entry way into the garage. Just above the basement wall, the framework of the house extended one foot beyond the concrete wall and the underside of this overhang was lined with plywood. Along the front of the house, just below this overhang, Mr. Lowes had put up some temporary scaffolding so he could reach high enough to apply asbestos siding to the front of the house. Thus, the. scaffolding rested against the basement wall and extended upward from the ground to the top of the basement wall.

At this northeast corner of the house, the defendant’s power supply line joined *508 the plaintiffs’ electrical system. Mr. Lowes had used power tools and a radio inside the house, and defendant had been furnishing electricity to the house for several months. The defendant’s equipment consisted of a pole, a transformer, a three-wire power line, a hanger to attach the power line to the house, and three clip fasteners to attach defendant’s power line to the wires of plaintiffs’ distribution system. Plaintiffs’ equipment, insofar as we are here concerned, consisted of a three-strand wire running through a metal conduit pipe fastened to the side of the house. To understand the parties’ theories of the cause of the fire, we must describe the equipment in detail, beginning at defendant’s pole and moving toward the interior of the house.

The defendant’s pole was near the roadway, 104 feet from plaintiffs’ house. Atop the pole was defendant’s transformer. There are differences in transformers regarding cut-off devices to stop the flow of electricity from the transformer in the event of a short circuit. Some have circuit breakers and some have fuses; other transformers are purposely designed without any type of automatic cut-off device. The record does not disclose which type of transformer this was.

From defendant’s transformer its power line extended under a tree in plaintiffs’ front yard to a point under the eaves at the northeast corner of their house. This power line is called a triplex wire, consisting of two live, insulated wires braided around a neutral, uninsulated, weight-bearing wire. The triplex wire was suspended from plaintiffs’ house by a foot-long hanger, through which its neutral strand passed. At one end of the hanger was a porcelain knob, attached to the house. At the other end of the hanger was an aluminum clamp, consisting of a base and a compression slide. The neutral strand of the triplex wire — but not the energized strands — ran through this clamp and was held in place by pressure exerted between the base and the movable compression slide. Hence, the weight and tension of defendant’s power line was supported by its pole at one end and by its hanger on plaintiffs’ house at the other end. Four feet beyond defendant’s hanger was the upper end of plaintiffs’ conduit, a metal pipe attached to the side of the house. The defendant’s triplex wire extended two or three feet beyond its hanger; plaintiffs’ three wires extended two or three feet beyond the top of the conduit. The two sets of wires looped toward each other, and midway in this loop each of the three strands of defendant’s triplex wire was attached by a clip fastener to each of the three similar strands of plaintiffs’ wiring system. At the plaintiffs’ end of this loop, plaintiffs’ three strands of wire entered their conduit, extended downward through the conduit and followed a bend of the conduit through the basement wall, where the two live strands were attached to plaintiffs’ fuse box inside the garage. These were the physical elements that existed before the fire.

The Fire. The day of the fire was warm, windy and dry. There were “a lot of leaves” on the ground around plaintiffs’ house. About 6 p. m., several neighbors noticed a fire at plaintiffs’ house. Three of them testified: When they arrived at the scene, the whole inside of the house was ablaze and smoke, flames, and pieces of burning wood were coming out of bursted windows and doors. The fire was burning most intensely at the northeast corner of the house. (It was here that the defendant’s triplex wire and plaintiffs’ lead-in conduit had been attached. Here, also, was the open doorway into the basement garage.) This northeast corner of the house had “fallen off,” the exterior wiring had been severed, and the burnt end of defendant’s triplex wire, still energized and flashing, was lying somewhere in the yard amid burning leaves. The defendant’s transformer was buzzing and showing a red signal light, until defendant’s lineman arrived, climbed the pole, and disconnected the transformer. No witness testified about the condition of plaintiffs’ electrical *509 equipment during the fire, nor when or whether the plaintiffs’ scaffolding burned.

After the Fire. Other material evidence concerned the cause and effect of short circuits, the mechanical functions of the electrical equipment, and its condition after the fire. Mr. Lowes arrived at the house two hours after the fire had started. Then or later, he raked through the burnt debris and retrieved several pieces of electrical equipment. Mr. Lowes identified them at the trial and they were examined by plaintiffs’ expert witness, Arthur Patridge, an electrician.

Mr.

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405 S.W.2d 506, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowes-v-union-electric-company-moctapp-1966.