Scott v. City of Springfield

81 Mo. App. 312, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 408
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 Mo. App. 312 (Scott v. City of Springfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. City of Springfield, 81 Mo. App. 312, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 408 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

This is an action by the plaintiff, who is the widow of John R. Scott, deceased, against the defendant, [316]*316a city of the third class, to recover damages on account of the fatal injuries received by the plaintiff’s said husband in consequence of the negligence of the defendant city.

The defendant city entered into a written contract with one Enoch Plummer whereby the latter agreed to lay a sewer pipe on Phelp’s avenue in the defendant city. It further appears from the record .that the said Plummer was joined with the defendant and filed an answer in the cause. There was a trial in the circuit court which resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff against the defendant city, from which this appeal is prosecuted. As to the other defendant, the judgment was for him; and from that judgment it does not appear the plaintiff prosecuted a cross appeal. The successful defendant was permitted, at this point, to retire from the case.

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence and at the conclusion of all the evidence the defendant city interposed a demurrer thereto, which was overruled by the trial court and the objections so taken by defendant city is renewed here. The propriety of the action of the court in respect to the demurrer can not be intelligently determined without first making some reference not only to the allegations of negligence contained in the petition but .as well to the evidence adduced in support of the same. Following an allegation in respect to the entering into the written contract by said Plummer with the defendant city, to which reference has already been made, the petition proceeds in this wise:

“The said Plummer, Johnson and "Woolridge negligently and carelessly laid out and began digging said excavation at the intersection of said alley and Phelps avenue aforesaid, eight inches from the line of said water-mains, in loose and rotten earth, and directed the- work of excavation in an easterly direction on said Phelps avenue, along the line of said water-main, but in a manner, as the excavation progressed eastward, that carried said sewer excavation against the line of said water-main, [317]*317and in contact with same, and over, under and across said main; that is to say, while the line of said excavation started in at that point abovp indicated, and eight inches south of said water-main at said initial point, and as given by said engineer, concurred in by said inspector, and adopted by said Plummer, it had a general course that carried it obliquely against, on, over and under the line of said water-main, so that in constructing and digging said excavation the water-main aforesaid became exposed along the eastern half of said excavation, and for a distance of fifty (50) feet or more said water-main became, and was suspended in the air without any mechanical support, without braces or props or sufficient pillars, the walls of the excavation being unsupported by braces or props, and said water-main being about seven feet above the bottom of. said trench, was dangerous and menacing to the workmen engaged in said trench, and was seen and known to be in such condition by said Johnson, and the said Woolridge, and the said Plummer, at the time.
“That the said Johnson, Woolridge and Plummer disregarding their several and joint duties in the premises, carelessly and negligently laid out and carried on said excavation in a manner dangerous to .those who were engaged in same, carelessly and negligently failed to prop or support said exposed water-main or to provide said excavation with a proper number of pillars) and carelessly and negligently carried on said excavation, and gave no warning to those who were then working under them of the danger and peril of the situation.
“That while the said Scott was thus laying and cementing said sewer pipe, and while he was in the lawful discharge of his duty, and prosecuting his said work of laying the sewer pipe aforesaid, and while in the act of cementing the joints of said sewer pipe under one of the [318]*318pillars of earth left standing in said excavation, and while said water-main was so exposed and suspended, and without notice ox warning from any one of the true condition of things, said water-main, borne down by pressure and its great weight, and the weight of water it contained, and by reason of the careless and negligent acts of the said Plummer, the said Johnson, and the said "Woolridge, broke, fell and parted at a distance of about twenty-five feet from where the said Scott was then working, causing the water in said water-main to rush into said sewer excavation with such force, rapidity, and violence, as to immediately fill up the said excavation, causing the earth at its sides to cave in and upon said Scott, the water to rush upon, and over him, and thereby suffocated and killed the said Scott.”

The facts disclosed by the undisputed evidence were, briefly stated, about these:

Phelps avenue, in said defendant city, runs east and west from Benton avenue to Jefferson street. There is an intersecting alley on the north side of Phelps avenue between. Benton avenue and Jefferson street. The contract between the defendant city and Plummer required the sewer to be laid along Phelps avenue and along the alley between the intersecting streets just named.. The ditch in which the sewer pipe was to be laid was located by the engineer of the defendant city on the north side of Phelps avenue. Its depth between the terminal points already indicated varied from seven to nine feet and its width was about two feet. It paralleled the six-inch water pipe of the defendant city, located on the same side of the street and which was about four feet below the surface of the street. The sections of said water pipe were thirty-two feet long and were not laid on a direct east and west line between said intersecting streets. In digging the sewer ditch the water pipe at places became exposed to view.

The ditch was dug in four compartments or sections from [319]*319thirty-two to thirty-six feet long, separated by bulkheads between each which were left standing up as high as the line of the water pipe. There was a tunnel driven through the bulkheads from one compartment to the next, which was large enough for a man to crawl through. There was a manhole at the center of the intersection of the alley. The plaintiff’s husband was employed in laying the sewer pipe in the ditch. On the day of the accident he went down into the ditch near the second bulkhead east of the manhole and crawled into the tunnel under it with the intention of cementing at that point the joints of two sections of the sewer pipe, and while engaged in the work so intended to be done the water pipe between the bulkhead where he was at work and the next one west of him, near the manhole, bursted and filled the ditch with water, by reason of which he was suffocated and drowned. The water pipe seemed to rest all the way along on a solid bench of hard material. At the place where it bursted the supporting bench caved in, or, as expressed by the witnesses, it “sloughed off” and one end ef a section of the pipe went into the bottom of the ditch.

The section of the pipe broke just where the spigot end was inserted into the bell. The superintendent of the defendant city’s waterworks, who was present and witnessed the catastrophe, testified that it sprung out laterally in the center and .then went down into the ditch. No defect was discovered in the pipe. The pressure at the time of the catastrophe was sixty-five pounds to the square inch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 Mo. App. 312, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-city-of-springfield-moctapp-1899.