Nomath Hotel Co. v. Kansas City Gas Co.

253 S.W. 975, 300 Mo. 240, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 250
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 31, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 975 (Nomath Hotel Co. v. Kansas City Gas 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
Nomath Hotel Co. v. Kansas City Gas Co., 253 S.W. 975, 300 Mo. 240, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 250 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*245 WOODSON, J.

— This spit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Jackson County by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover $12,500 damages sustained, caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant in permitting natural gas to escape from its pipes and into the basement of plaintiff’s premises, which contained a restaurant known as the Pennant Cafe, which, in the transactions of the ordinary business of the cafe in the ordinary way, exploded and caused the damages sued for.

The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, and a motion for a new trial having been filed the court sustained the same for the reasons 'stated, that it had erred in giving defendant’s instructions numbered 9 and 16, from which action of the court in sustaining said motion the defendant duly appealed the cause to this court.

The negligence charged in the second amended petition is in this language:

. . negligently and.carelessly caused and permitted a large quantity of natural gas to escape from the Baltimore Avenue and Thirteenth Street mains aforesaid at points within a radius of 400 feet from plaintiff’s basements and also from the gas main, valve and valve box, pipes, piping and other conduits, so owned, operated and maintained by defendant in and under the east side of Baltimore Avenue aforesaid adjacent to the premises so occupied by the plaintiff, and to leak and seep from defendant’s said mains, valve and valve box, *246 pipes and pipe lines, through and into and around the said water pipes, valve, valve box and fire hydrant and thence through and around said water drain or waste pipe into plaintiff’s basement, and also through the walls and foundations of said seven-story buildings in various places, so that such natural gas accumulated in the basement rooms so occupied by plaintiff, and particularly in said linen store room and office room, in sufficient quantities and so mixed with the air in said room as to be combustible and explosive.”

The answer of the defendant to the first amended petition of the plaintiff in substance was:

First: . A general denial.

Second: A plea of contributory negligence.

Third: Plaintiff negligently, and unlawfully, and in violation of Ordinance No. 8690' of Kansas City, Missouri, installed into its basement a gas pump or booster, and connected the same with the pipes of the defendant, and on account of that negligence and unlawfulness the gas, if any, was caused to escape from said pipes or pump, and was ignited by sparks generated from said pump- or booster, and thereby caused the explosion.

Fourth: That by reason of said negligence and unlawful cjonduct of the plaintiff in installing said gas pump or booster, the plaintiff unlawfully and wrongfully drew from the pipes more than its proportional part of the natural gas that was being furnished to the customers of Kansas City and thereby contributed to its own injury.

Fifth: That if any gas leaked into the plaintiff’s basement, the latter knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have detected, that fact, and that it was his duty under a contract with the defendant to have notified the defendant of such leakage in writing as soon as so discovered, and had it done so, the defendant could have stopped same in time to have prevented the explosion, and the plaintiff having so neglected to notify the defendant of such leakage, it was guilty of contributory negligence.

*247 The reply put in issue all the new matter stated in the answer.

I have examined the record carefully, and have failed to find that the defendant filed a second amended answer to the second amended petition, at least it is not so indexed that I could find it, and since the trial proceeded without it, I naturally presume the parties went to trial without it, which conduct of theirs is equivalent to refiling the first amended answer.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that a terrific explosion of natural gas occurred in plaintiff’s basement at 1211 and 1213 Baltimore Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, and the plaintiff sustained substantial damages to its property by reason thereof. The case was previously tried and the verdict was for plaintiff and was appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals which court reversed and remanded the cause for a new trial, with leave for the plaintiff to file a second amended petition, which was done, and which contained the charges of negligence previously quoted. That case is reported in the 204 Mo. App. 214, to which reference is here made.

Baltimore Avenue runs north and south, and the basement, which is on the east side thereof, began under the sidewalk curb line, and, with a frontage width of forty feet, ran back east to an alley. The basement was divided into three rooms: one, called the office room, used also for linen and storage purposes, about 8 by 2,0 feet, was in the southwest corner under the sidewalk; another, called the service bar room, was immediately north of the office room, also under the sidewalk; and the third, which was the kitchen of plaintiff’s cafe/ occupied the entire remainder of the basement, extending from said two small rooms east about ninety feet to the alley. ’

The explosion occurred in the office room which was enclosed on the west, north and south sides by eighteen-inch concrete foundation walls, the false ceiling under the concrete sidewalk being composed of three-inch con *248 crete slabs containing heavy art-glass skylights, and the only fragile wall being a light terracotta partition on the east side of the room.

The explosion blew out parts of the false ceiling and sidewalk above, lifting, up and breaking the sidewalk and concrete slabs, and, following the course of least resistance, took an eastward direction with such force that it tore out the east terracotta wall and wrecked everything in its pathway into and half way thr ough the deep' ldtchen room, killing an employee; and the force of the explosion was so great that a one-and-a,-half-ton refrigeration box was thrown over and partially wrecked. The solid masonry on all three other sides of the office so directed the course of the explosion due eastward through the light partition wall. The evidences of the fire which followed the explosion were more on the west than east side of this office room, and at or near the ceiling.

The office room contained no windows, transoms, or other means of ventilation, and had been closed, practically the first time in the cafe’s history, for two days. It contained no gas pipes of any kind, and a waste water drain in the floor at one corner was in good working order and equipped with a device which prevented any sew!er gas from coming up into the room.

The gas service pipe supplying gas to the cafe entered the basement through the adjoining service barroom on the north. This room contained also the gas meter and a. gas booster pump used by the plaintiff. From this room the gas service pipe proceeded directly into the kitchen and was entirely outside of the office room.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 975, 300 Mo. 240, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nomath-hotel-co-v-kansas-city-gas-co-mo-1923.