Sexton v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

149 S.W. 21, 245 Mo. 254, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 21 (Sexton v. Metropolitan Street Railway 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
Sexton v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 149 S.W. 21, 245 Mo. 254, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 230 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

CRAVES, P. J.

— Action for personal injuries. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $10,635, from which said judgment the defendant has [261]*261appealed. Matters of pleading and proof to a limited extent can be well stated together. By his petition and his proof it is shown that plaintiff was an experienced electrician working for the defendant at its power house at Fifteenth and Walnut streets in Kansas City, Missouri. In this power house were four electric machines called rotary converters, belonging to defendant, and some others that did not belong to defendant. Plaintiff worked at nights and had' charge of the four machines which belonged to defendant. On the night of July 7, 1907, he was severely burned and injured by what is called a “flashover” occurring on machine No. 2, one of the four machines above mentioned. The petition of plaintiff is drawn upon the theory that the disturbance occurring in machine No. 2 on that night was produced by tar which had leaked through the roof of the building. The negligence is thus charged in the petition:

“That said flashover, blaze, explosion and arcing were caused by tar negligently permitted by defendant to leak through the roof of said building and drop upon said electric machinery. That said tar had: been leaking through said roof on different parts of machinery in said power house and on the frame work of said machinery and on the floor of said power house for six or eight weeks, and that defendant knew of said tar leaking through on said machinery and in said power house, or by the exercise of ordinary care could: have known the same, and that it was the duty of defendant to have prevented the leaking of said tar on said roof through the same and upon said machinery and in said power house; the attention of defendant’s foreman, vice-principal and manager, whose duty it was to keep said roof in repair and order, had been called to said leaking of said tar five or six weeks prior to the injuries complained of herein; that said foreman, vice-principal and manager had been requested to repair the same to prevent said leaking of [262]*262said tar and had been warned that failure to do so would probably cause damage to said machinery; that said defendant’s said foreman,vice-principal or manager whose duty it was to keep said ,roof in repair, promised to repair the same, but notwithstanding said promise and notwithstanding the fact that his attention had been specially called to said leaking of said tar from said roof on said machinery and in said power house, said foreman, vice-principal and manager, negligently failed to repair the same and negligently permitted it to remain in that leaky condition, and permitted said tar to continue to leak and drop' upon said electric machinery and that said tar did continue to leak and drop upon said electric machinery and upon said rotary converter and appliances thereto and therewith connected; that said accident was caused by the carelessness and neg’ligence of the defendant’s foreman, vice-principal and manager in permitting said tar to continue to leak through said roof, to continue to drop upon said rotary converters and the appliances thereto and therewith connected and upon said machinery and in not repairing said roof and preventing such tar falling on said rotary converters and said appliances thereto and therewith connected and causing said flashover, blaze, explosion and arcing.”

The answer is (1) a general denial,' (2) an affirmative plea of contributory negligence, and (3) assumption of risk. Reply was a general denial. Such is the general outline of the case. Questions raised will require some elaboration of the facts, but this will be done in connection with the points made.

I. Defendant challenges the sufficiency of plaintiff’s petition, in this, that it is urged that the petition fails to aver that the leaking upon the machinery rendered such machinery dangerous to those operating it. The petition avers that defendant’s foreman had been [263]*263warned of the leaking tar and had been requested to .repair the roof so as to prevent such leaking. The petition also avers that said foremhn “had been warned that failure to do so would probably cause damage to said machinery.” There is no express averment in the petition to the effect that dropping tar would render such machinery dangerous to those using it, or would probably make it dangerous to use it in the usual and ordinary methods. N.o.r is there any allegation that defendant knew or might have known that tar falling upon the machinery would render it dangerous to operators.

If the petition states no cause o'f action at all, then the question can be raised here for the first time. In this court such is horn-book law. On the other hand, if the petition defectively states a cause of action, and such petition is not attacked by motion or demurrer below, as is true in this case, then such petition will be held good after verdict. [R. S. 1909, Sec. 2119i]

There is some unfortunate language used in the petition as above indicated. Not only so, but there is absence of some material allegations, but we are further impressed with the view that the petition defectively states a cause of action, rather than with the view that it states no cause of action. The line between the two classes of petitions is at times hard to draw, and this petition presents one of the hard cases, but as above stated we think it is a petition which falls under the broad protecting wing of the statutes cited. The petition does allege that plaintiff was injured by reason of a “flashover.” It does allege that the “flashover” was occasioned by tar dropping on the machinery, and that such dropping of tar was negligently permitted by the defendant. Under our very broad saving statute, we feel constrained to hold the petition good after verdict. In this contention the defendant is therefore overruled.

[264]*264II. The crucial point in this case is the sufficiency of the proof. It is clear that before plaintiff should be permitted to recover, his proof must show (1) that his injuries resulted from a “flashover,” (2) that such “flashover” was occasioned by tar falling upon machine No. 2, (3) that tar was negligently permitted so to fall by the defendant, and (4) that defendant should reasonably have anticipated that its negligent act would occasion injury to its operators. The proof•does.show that plaintiff’s injuries were the result of a “flashover,” and it further tends to show that tar had been leaking through the roof in places. This is as far as the proof in direct terms goes.

Going now to the 'details. The commutator continually and rapidly moves. Its face comes in contact with twelve rows of brushes of eleven brushes each. These alternate as to the character of the current passing through them. One row contains brushes through which the positive current passes and the next row brushes through which the negative current passes. These rows were about nineteen inches apart, as we gather it. The brushes are a carbon compound, so made as to be pressed closely to the moving surface of the large wheel or commutator. The brush is held in place by a holder and is kept pressing against the commutator by a spring. A slight raising of the carbon brush from the face of the commutator will cause what is denominated “sparking.” A “flash-over” is a passing over of the current from a positive brush to the negative brush. This brush fits closely in the holder, but can be pushed up and down in the holder. On the night in question plaintiff observed a sparking from one of the brushes.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 21, 245 Mo. 254, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sexton-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-mo-1912.