Morton v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co.

217 S.W. 831, 280 Mo. 360, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 197
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 6, 1920
DocketNos. 20143, 21431, 21432.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 831 (Morton v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone 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
Morton v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co., 217 S.W. 831, 280 Mo. 360, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 197 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

Two separate appeals from one judgment and one motion to affirm have been docketed as three cases by the above numbers, but by stipulation they are consolidated and considered together.

The plaintiff, Amanda L. Morton, brought suit in the Circuit Court of St. Louis against the Hiram Lloyd Building Construction Company, the Southwestern Telegraph Telephone Company, and the Union Electric Light Power Company, seeking to recover damages on account of the death of her husband, caused, it is alleged, by the negligence of the three defendants. On trial to a jury in the Circuit Court of St. Louis, a verdict was rendered in her favor in the sum of seven *Page 370 thousand, five hundred dollars against the defendant Hiram Lloyd Building Construction Company, and in favor of the other two defendants. A motion for new trial was filed by Amanda L. Morton as against the Southwestern Telegraph Telephone Company, hereafter for convenience called "the Telephone Company," and the Union Electric Light Power Company, hereafter called "the Power Company;" and a motion for new trial was filed by the Hiram Lloyd Building Construction Company, hereafter called "the Construction Company." These motions were overruled at the June term, 1916. On June 26, 1916, the Construction Company appealed from the judgment against it to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and a short transcript was duly sent to that court. At the same term, on September 29th, the plaintiff, Amanda L. Morton, appealed from said judgment to the St. Louis Court of Appeals and her appeal was duly allowed. A transcript of the judgment and order granting the appeal of the plaintiff, Amanda L. Morton, although ordered by the trial court sent to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, was sent to this court and appears here under the serial number 20143. Those transcripts thus rested in the two courts until July 24, 1918, when the respondents in the plaintiff's appeal, the Telephone Company and the Power Company, filed a joint motion to affirm in the St. Louis Court of Appeals, accompanied by the certificate of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, as provided by Section 2047, Revised Statutes 1909, showing that the judgment had been rendered, as stated above, and the appeal taken. This motion was by the St. Louis Court of Appeals on the same day sustained and the judgment affirmed. Three days later, July 27, 1918, the Construction Company, appealing defendant, filed a motion in said court to set aside the order of affirmance, with suggestions in support of same. To this the other defendants, Telephone Company and Power Company, filed suggestions in opposition. This motion, *Page 371 October 5, 1918, was sustained and the order of affirmance set aside.

On the twenty-eighth day of October, 1918, Amanda L. Morton filed her motion in the St. Louis Court of Appeals to transfer the cause involving both appeals to this court and that motion was on November 19, 1918, sustained and the appeals transferred here where they appear under numbers 21431 and 21432.

The death of Ernest L. Morton, husband of plaintiff, from which arose her claim for damages, occurred on the twenty-sixth day of November, 1915, while he was employed by the appellant Construction Company. The Construction Company, under contract with the city, was at the time engaged in the reconstruction and repairing of a reservoir owned by the city. The reservoir was located in what is known as Reservoir Park; a strip of park surrounded the two basins which constituted the reservoir. The Construction Company had built a fence around the reservoir, dividing the strip of park which surrounded it, and the work was being done inside this inclosure. A line of poles ran from the northwest corner of the property southwardly across the fence to a point inside the park, there being at least two of such poles inside the inclosure. These poles were from twenty-five to thirty feet in height, and each one supported two cross-arms about eighteen inches apart. The upper cross-arms carried a telephone wire; the lower cross-arms carried three or four power wires which were charged with very high voltage of electricity. There was evidence tending to show that the telephone wire and upper cross-arms were owned by the Telephone Company. The defendant Power Company owned the power wires on the lower cross-arms, and through them conveyed current to a transformer and a meter where the current and power were delivered to the defendant Construction Company inside the inclosure. The Power Company had a contract with the Construction Company to furnish power for *Page 372 use in the work which the Construction Company was doing.

On the 12th day of November, fourteen days preceding the death of Morton, the employees of the Construction Company, in the progress of their work, caused the first pole inside the inclosure to be broken off. A few days later this pole was replaced. On the eighteenth day of November, and eight days before the death of Morton, the employees of the defendant Construction Company, while engaged in "fleeting a guy," that is, moving a guy line forward with a pile driver, broke the telephone wire inside the inclosure, between the first pole inside and the first pole outside. The broken wire dropped down beside the first pole inside the inclosure, was gathered up by one of the Construction Company's employees, coiled up and hung on the pole. It remained intact between the first and the second poles inside the inclosure. There is some evidence indicating manipulation of the broken end in wrapping it around the pole. Soon after this wire was broken it began to sag between the first and second poles inside the inclosure. A day or two, or possibly longer, before the death was inflicted, it had sagged to within ten or twelve feet of the ground. In sagging down it came in contact with the power wires. On the twenty-sixth of November, in the afternoon, it was seen to sag to within four or five feet of the ground.

Morton's work required him to be on the ground during the night. He was not a watchman, but what is termed, "the handy man" — the general utility man. It was his duty to see that the machinery was kept in operation and that everything was in proper shape during the night. Among other things, it was his duty to fill the boilers with water. Eight or ten feet from where the telephone wire sagged was a water pipe which came from the reservoir, at which pipe he could get water for the boilers. He went to work as usual on the twenty-sixth of November, at night. About eleven o'clock that night the Construction Company foreman *Page 373 discovered his body lying across the telephone wire with his feet on the ground. Sparks were coming from his leg and body and his clothing was on fire. He was burned in such a way as to indicate that he met instantaneous death by electrocution. Other details in connection with the incident are furnished by the evidence as throwing light upon the issue as to whether the defendants, or any of them, were guilty of such negligence as to authorize a recovery. Such of these as are pertinent will be noticed in considering the proposition urged for a reversal.

The petition alleges a cause of action against each of the defendants in that they were each and all negligent in permitting the wire mentioned to sag and become charged with electricity in such manner as to become dangerous and cause death. There was no claim of contributory negligence on the part of either of the defendants, each of whom answered by a general denial.

I. The jurisdiction of this court is challenged by the respondent-defendants. They move to have case No. 21431 ordered back to the St. Louis Court of Appeals,Appellate Jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 831, 280 Mo. 360, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-southwestern-telegraph-telephone-co-mo-1920.