McGaugh v. City of Fulton

205 S.W.2d 547, 356 Mo. 1122, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 8, 1947
DocketNo. 40115.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 205 S.W.2d 547 (McGaugh v. City of Fulton) 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
McGaugh v. City of Fulton, 205 S.W.2d 547, 356 Mo. 1122, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 666 (Mo. 1947).

Opinions

In this action by Earl McGaugh against the City of Fulton, for personal injuries resulting from an explosion, the court sustained the city's motion for judgment in accordance with its previous motion for a directed verdict after a jury had been unable to agree upon a verdict. The court sustained the motion upon the specific grounds that the plaintiff's evidence failed to establish a cause of action against the city or to show any causal connection between the alleged negligence of the city and the explosion and injuries. Upon this appeal by McGaugh the sole question then is whether his evidence reasonably demonstrates negligence on the part of the city, causal connection, and consequent prima facie liability.

McGaugh and his family were tenants in a four-room frame house at Eighth and Walnut Streets. The house had a full concrete basement with four windows which were closed at the time of the explosion. Entry to the basement was by means of a trap door on the back porch. The McGaughs had lived in the house ten days when Earl went to the basement about eight-thirty on the evening of January 21st, 1943 with a lighted cigarette in his mouth and, immediately upon his entering the basement, there was a terrific explosion which injured him and damaged the house. The house was raised off the foundation and the floors collapsed. No one had previously detected an odor of gas in the basement and once or twice prior to the explosion the McGaughs had done the family washing in the basement, using a three-burner coal oil stove which they carried to the basement from the kitchen.

It was the plaintiff's theory that the explosion was of sewer gas or natural gas or a combination of both sewer gas and natural gas. The plaintiff's amended petition, as it stood upon the trial of the cause, charged negligence on the part of the city in the construction, *Page 1127 maintenance and operation of its municipally owned gas and sewer system so as to permit gas to escape into the plaintiff's basement. It was alleged that the city was negligent in the installation of its pipes, in failing to find and repair a break in its natural gas main about 400 feet from the plaintiff's residence, in the construction and maintenance of its sewer main on Seventh Street with an unvented dead end and in failing to keep the vents in its manhole covers open along Seventh and Walnut Streets. When the case was submitted to the jury the plaintiff proffered instructions hypothesizing the city's negligence in connection with its sewer system but did not proffer an instruction hypothesizing negligence concerning natural gas. Nevertheless the plaintiff now claims that his evidence demonstrated negligence on the part of the city in connection with both its sewer and natural gas systems.

The house was built in 1940 and all sewer installations and appliances were installed by a plumber under contract with the owner and builder. The plumbing consisted of a lavatory, stool, bathtub and kitchen sink on the first floor. These were all connected [549] with individual traps to a soil pipe which passed through the floor of the basement and were connected with the city sewer at the property line on Walnut Street. Between the center of the basement and its west wall there was a drain in the floor covered by a grill and set in a sump in the floor. The drain was equipped with a trap and entered the sewer line with a "Y" connection. Between the drain and the west wall there was a cleanout pipe. As we understand the record the openings in the basement plumbing were, first, the cleanout pipe, second, the floor trap which connects with the "Y" and, third, was a vent or stack from the bathroom up through the house. The inference, as we understand, was that the cleanout pipe should have been connected with the sewer line ahead of the "Y" rather than back of it. It should be interpolated that the record is not perfectly clear whether the stack through the roof was connected with the sewer back of the plumbing fixtures or whether it was ahead of the fixtures only. But, whether these two latter points are clear or not, the cleanout pipe was uncapped at the time of the explosion and had been for some time, we assume for at least ten days. McGaugh saw the pipe but did not know its purpose or that it was supposed to have been capped. He supposed it was a part of the drain.

The city sewer line extended from Seventh Street up Walnut Street about 400 feet and terminated in a dead end almost in front of the McGaugh house. There was no manhole at the dead end sewer, but there was a lamphole of tile covered with an iron cap. There was a manhole at the intersection of Seventh and Walnut Streets, another 300 feet west of the intersection on Seventh Street and one 200 feet east of the intersection. The evidence was that all the manhole covers were perforated or contained holes but the holes were all closed up *Page 1128 with asphalt paving and had been for some time. The city did not offer any evidence but one of its employees, testifying for the plaintiff, said that manholes were for the purpose of permitting work on the sewer lines and that the theory of holes in manhole covers for the purpose of venting sewers had been discarded. However, there was positive testimony from another witness that the holes in manhole covers served the dual purpose of providing access to them and of venting them, to allow the "escape of air and gas from the sewer and also allow the introduction of fresh air into the sewers." There was testimony that sewer gas accumulated in the sewers and that venting them through manhole covers permitted the gas to escape. The composition and explosive nature of sewer gas was described. Two witnesses, both city employees, testified that the uncapped cleanout pipe in the basement drain would permit gas to enter the basement. One of these witnesses, the superintendent of the gas department, testified that shortly after the explosion he examined the premises and found the uncapped cleanout pipe. He said, "I found a combustible gas in the sewer. Inside the sewer. In the cleanout opening." He used a Davis Emergency Combustible Indicator and it registered "Dangerous." He was unable to separate the kinds of combustible gases but, he said, "There was a trace of sewer gas."

"Q. Was there any trace of natural gas?

A. There was a trace of combustible gas. I couldn't sort them out at the time.

Q. Then it could have been either one as far as you are concerned?

A. Yes, could have been.
Q. It could have been both?
A. It could have been something else."

The natural gas line ran in front of the McGaugh residence along Walnut Street between Seventh and Eighth Streets. The gas line was laid about five feet and eight inches west of the east sidewalk in the parkway. As we understand the record, the gas lines did not intersect the sewer lines but, as the appellant says, the two lines paralleled one another for some distance up Walnut Street. Nor, as we understand it, was the McGaugh house connected with the natural gas main. But, on March 18, 1943, fifty-eight days after the explosion a complete break in the gas main was found. The break was in the Seventh Street main about twenty feet from the intersection of the gas line on Walnut Street and approximately 500 feet from the McGaugh residence. The city employee who found and [550] repaired the gas break testified that in his judgment the break was not over a week old. He said that the ends of the pipe were spread apart about one-quarter of an inch and were bright.

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W.2d 547, 356 Mo. 1122, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgaugh-v-city-of-fulton-mo-1947.