Meeker ex rel. Meeker v. Union Electric Light & Power Co.

216 S.W. 923, 279 Mo. 574, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 17, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 923 (Meeker ex rel. Meeker v. Union Electric Light & Power 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
Meeker ex rel. Meeker v. Union Electric Light & Power Co., 216 S.W. 923, 279 Mo. 574, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 171 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

The plaintiff brought this suit in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis against the defendant, to recover the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars for personal injuries received by him through the alleged negligence of the defendant. The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $50,000, which upon motion by the defendant was by the court reduced to $35,000. After taking the proper preliminary steps therefor, the defendant duly appealed the cause to this court.

The charging part of the petition was as follows:

“The defendant negligently and carelessly permitted one or more of its said wires then and there charged as aforesaid, to become uninsulated and broken in two, and to fall to the surface of said alley, and to remain broken in two and down then and there while fully charged with electricity as aforesaid, when it knew, or ought by the exercise of the highest degree of care and caution to have known, that said wires were so uninsulated and broken and down as aforesaid, and liable if touched by any human being while so uninsulated, broken and down and charged as aforesaid, to cause serious injury or destroy human life.”

The petition then alleges that while said wires were thus in said alley, “uninsulated, broken in two and down and charged with electricity as aforesaid,” the plaintiff, while walking along in said alley, came in contact with said wires, and was thereby violently precipitated to the ground and seriously, painfully and permanently injured. He sues for $75,009 damages.

After the general denial the answer contained the following:

[581]*581“Further answering, defendant states that, although plaintiff saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care on his part might have seen, that the wire referred to in the petition had bnrned through and that one end was lying in the alley, and although he was warned not to touch it because it was dangerous to do so, and well knowing that there was such danger, he nevertheless approached it or came in contact with it and his negligence, in the above particulars, was the proximate causo of his injuries or directly contributed thereto.”

There is no controversy as to what the evidence of the plaintiff tended to prove, but there were numerous objections made and preserved as to the competency and relevancy of much of that evidence; and I will therefore set out the substance of the testimony of the witnesses as preserved in the refcord, and thereafter pass upon tho objections thereto saved.

The plaintiff was about fourteen years of age at the date of the injury which occurred in the City of St. Louis on June 15, 1915.

The defendant, Union Electric Light & power Company, is a corporation, engaged in the business of furnishing and selling electric light and power in said city. -In certain portions of St. Louis it strings its wires upon poles and such wires extend along, over and across streets and alleys. On the date in question and for a long time prior thereto, the defendant maintained a wire carrying 2,200 volts of electricity, along a public alley running east and west from Clifton Avenue to Tamm Avenue, in the southwestern part of St. Louis, and in the rear of a number known as 6273 Magnolia Avenue. Surrounding this alley are streets as follows: Clifton Avenue, running north and south; Magnolia Avenue, running east and west; Columbia Street, running east and west, and Tamm Avenue, running north and south. The wire in question, was strung on poles on the south side of the alloy and at a point in the rear of 6273 Magnolia Avenue; it crossed the alley diagonally and extended through the top of a tree. Nearby, located upon the cross-arms of [582]*582one of the posts, was a transformer, the purpose of which was to reduce the current carried on the primary wire, that is, the 2,200 volts, to 110 and 220 volts in order that it might be distributed to residences and business houses nearby, for electric lighting and other purposes. Such distribution was made to a saloon conducted by Charles ■Meyer, at 6400 Old Manchester Road, about 125 feet from the point where the accident occurred; and to the residence of Mrs. Gr. B. Huffington, 6233 Magnolia Avenue, as well as to the residence of other persons residing in that neighborhood.

About two weeks previous to the accident Mrs. Joseph Stewart, who then lived at 6273 Magnolia Avenue, and whose rear gate opens on the alley at the point where the plaintiff was injured, noticed the electric wire which ran in the rear of her house and at the place where the boy was injured,, burning like a street car .wire would be “when the trolley would be off.” Her house sat some distance back from the alley and she was sitting in her bedroom rocking her baby. The boughs of the trees were waving and every time the tree rubbed against the wire it would cause a flash and a flame to be’ thrown sufficient to light up the bedroom in which she sat. The flashes and flames would occur when the wind blew the tree against the wire. After the accident she saw the limb and it looked as if it were dead, and there was a groove in it about the size of the wire, indicating where the wire had rubbed.

Miss Gertrude Castle, who resided at 6263 Magnolia Avenue, noticed, two days before the accident, that at a point close to the pole, to which the .wire in question was attached, there was no insulation upon the wire; that it was in a sizzling condition and cast a blue flame. On the Sunday preceding the Tuesday on which the accident occurred, there had been an electrical storm and Miss Castle and her mother, Mrs. G. B. Huffington, heard a sizzling sound and saw a blue flame flashing from the wire at the pole outside of the house, in this alley and at the point where the wire subsequently broke. They [583]*583discovered that the electric lights in their house were not burning. Miss Castle looked up the defendant’s number in the telephone book, placed the call and was answered by a lady, who said, “Union Electric Light & Power Company.” Miss Castle told her that the lights were out and asked her to attend to it. The person speaking for the Union Electric Light & Power Company said, “Just a moment; I will speak to the man who has charge of that division,” and a moment later she said, “Yes; someone will be out to fix them this afternoon.”

The record discloses the fact that this wituess, as well as all the others who testified that they called the defendant over the telephone to complain of the defects or the troubles they were having with the wires and ’phones, had no personal knowledge of the persons who answered the ’phone, or who they represented, except that they presumed that they were agents of the defendant from the facts that they called its number and the response came therefrom. This evidence was objected to and exception duly saved.

This was about one o’clock. About four o’clock Miss Castle again tried the lights and found they were not on and she telephoned again to the Union Electric Light & Power Company, got the same party, who told her the same thing, and about six o’clock the lights were on. The sizzling noise and the popping which she heard, continued throughout the day and was about as loud as a fire cracker.

This occurred on Sunday, June 13th. The accident happened about four o’clock on the afternoon of Tuesday, June 15 th.

For ten days or two weeks before that Sunday, she had noticed that the lights in the house would be off sometimes as long as three or four minutes.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 923, 279 Mo. 574, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meeker-ex-rel-meeker-v-union-electric-light-power-co-mo-1919.