Nicholson v. Franciscus

40 S.W.2d 623, 328 Mo. 96, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 24, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 S.W.2d 623 (Nicholson v. Franciscus) 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
Nicholson v. Franciscus, 40 S.W.2d 623, 328 Mo. 96, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 616 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

Action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff was employed at the home of the defendants, husband and wife, as cook. She had been in the employ of Mr. and Mrs. Franciscus for several years and had worked as a cook for about a year prior to April 2, 1926, on which date she was injured when the lid or top of a steam cooker was blown off and the hot liquid content of the *Page 98 cooker was thrown upon plaintiff causing her to suffer severe burns. Plaintiff brought this action for damages in the sum of $15,000.

The petition makes conventional averments as to plaintiff's employment by defendants as a cook; the ownership and control of said steam pressure cooker by defendants; describes the construction, mechanism and proper manner of operation of the cooker; and alleges that the "said pressure cooker and equipment was under the complete control, management and charge of the defendants and the mechanism thereof was known or should have been known to the defendants, but the mechanism thereof and its manner of operation was not known to plaintiff." The petition then sets out the instructions concerning the operation of said cooker alleged to have been given by defendants to plaintiff and states that on the day of the "explosion" plaintiff strictly followed such instructions, but that while she was engaged in "removing the lid or cover of said cooker, through the negligence and carelessness of defendants the lid or cover of said cooker was unexpectedly and in an unusual manner blown off of the cooker and dislodged therefrom, and the hot contents of said cooker, consisting of hot soup, was thereby thrown over the body of the plaintiff and immediately over her chest, breast, stomach, arms and face, and she suffered deep, painful and permanent burns and injuries as a direct result thereof." Continuing the petition alleges that plaintiff "had no knowledge or means of knowing the causes which operated to bring about the extraordinary action of said pressure cooker as aforesaid" and that "all information or knowledge touching the causes which led to the blowing off and dislodging as aforesaid of said lid from said cooker in the manner hereinbefore mentioned was in the possession of the defendants and not in the possession of this plaintiff and not under her control, and she has no means whatsoever of knowing what caused the lid of said cooker to be blown off in such an unusual and violent manner."

Defendants' answer admitted plaintiff's employment as alleged in the petition; denied the other allegations of the petition and averred that plaintiff's injuries were caused by her own negligence; that she "was experienced in operating and handling the pressure cooker referred to" and that she "knew or by the exercise of ordinary care on her part could have known that it was not reasonably safe to remove the cover from the cooker until the steam had escaped therefrom; that on the occasion mentioned plaintiff failed and neglected to wait a sufficient length of time for the steam to escape from the cooker, and negligently removed, or attempted to remove, the cover from the cooker before the steam had escaped."

Plaintiff's testimony was that in the course of her employment as cook for the defendants she had operated the steam pressure cooker used in the kitchen of defendants' home continuously for a year; *Page 99 that the cooker was equipped with a pressure gauge indicating the presence or absence of steam and the amount of steam, if any, in the cooker; that when the food being prepared had been cooked sufficiently the cooker was removed from the heat and the "pet-cock" opened so that steam might escape, and the cooker was then "allowed to stand for twenty minutes or so and until the steam gauge registered zero." Plaintiff testified that she was instructed by the defendants that when the steam gauge registered zero the lid or top could with safety to the operator be removed from the cooker. We quote from appellant's statement of facts set out in her brief: "On the day of her injuries plaintiff was using the cooker, and attempted to remove the top (by removing certain clamps which held the top as against pressure of the steam within), when the cooker exploded and caused the hot liquid food to be thrown over the plaintiff, severely burning her" and "at the time she attempted to remove the top the steam gauge registered zero."

Tillie Kramer and Lena Woobles who were employed as maids in defendants' home at the time plaintiff was injured, testified as witnesses for the defendants. Both testified they were present in the kitchen immediately before and at the time the cooker "exploded." Lena Woobles said that, as she stood at a sink in the kitchen near the cooker which "was on a side table near the sink," she noticed that the guage on the cooker registered "nine pounds of steam;" that she then went to a table in the same room "to eat my lunch. Miss Kramer was there with me;" that she observed plaintiff starting to open the cooker and "I told her not to open it because it still had steam in it and she said. `O, today is my day off and I am in a hurry,' and she continued to open it and then she was burned." Tillie Kramer, the other maid present at the time, corroborated the testimony of Lena Woobles, testifying as follows: "It was just about lunch time and Tennie (the plaintiff) had called us to lunch and Lena and I were just sitting down at the table in the kitchen. She took the lid off and the soup flew all over her and the kitchen too. Before she took the lid off. Miss Woobles told her there was still steam in there, and Tennie said it was her day off and she was in a hurry. I heard Miss Woobles tell Tennie that there was still steam in the cooker and Tennie replied it was her day off and she was in a hurry and she went ahead and opened it anyway." No defect was discovered in any of the mechanism of the cooker, nor were any repairs ever made, and there was no testimony of any trouble or difficulty occurring in the operation of the cooker at any time either before or after the date of plaintiff's injury. Lena Woobles testified that she operated the cooker the next day after the accident and continuously thereafter during the following year and never had any trouble of any kind, and the witness Ella Schwinke *Page 100 stated that she operated the same cooker from September 15, 1927, until sometime in May following "and never had any trouble with it and nothing was wrong with it."

The jury returned a verdict for defendants and from the judgment entered thereon plaintiff appealed.

Appellant assigns as error the giving of defendants' instructions numbered 3 and 4. Instruction Number 3 is as follows:

"The court instructs the jury that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this case merely because sheInjury as may have been injured while working for theEvidence. defendants. The defendants were only required to exercise that degree of care and caution that ordinarily careful and prudent persons under the same or similar circumstances would exercise to keep and maintain the cooker mentioned in the evidence in a reasonably safe condition, and if you find and believe from the evidence in this case that the defendants did exercise that degree of care in this respect, then in that event the plaintiff cannot recover, and your verdict must be for the defendants."

Appellant complains of that part of the foregoing instruction which we have italicized, and says that, under the authority of Orris v. Railway Co., 279 Mo. 1, 214 S.W. 124, and the cases which have followed the Orris case and applied the rule announced in that case, such statement to the jury constitutes error.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W.2d 623, 328 Mo. 96, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-franciscus-mo-1931.