Springfield Crystallized Egg Co. v. Springfield Ice & Refrigerating Co.

168 S.W. 772, 259 Mo. 664, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 772 (Springfield Crystallized Egg Co. v. Springfield Ice & Refrigerating 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
Springfield Crystallized Egg Co. v. Springfield Ice & Refrigerating Co., 168 S.W. 772, 259 Mo. 664, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 106 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Plaintiff, a corporate manufacturer of hen’s egg product, in 1905 stored the rise of two hundred barrels of it with defendant, a corporate warehouseman, as a bailee for hire at five cents a barrel per month. Water damaged the product in July, 1905. Thereat plaintiff sued in the Greene Circuit Court laying its damages at $18,611.46 for negligence. Presently plaintiff took a change of venue to the Webster Circuit Court. Presently defendant, in turn, took a change of venue to the Laclede Circuit Court. In that court plaintiff obtained a verdict of $12,000 in August, 1910. Failing to obtain a new trial on a timely motion, judgment followed. Failing to arrest the judgment on a timely motion, defendant on apt steps and in due time appealed.

Errors assigned are of a scope and character seeking a summary of facts, pleadings and instructions.

The pleadings.

After conventional allegations anent the incorporation of both parties under the laws' of Missouri, the business of defendant as a public warehouseman for the storage of goods and products for hire, the storage by plaintiff of crystallized eggs at a stipulated hire of five cents per barrel per month, the value of the product, that it was of a character and nature making it necessary to keep it in a cool and dry place free from contact with water (and that water would ruin it),' the knowledge of defendant of such facts, and the duty of defendant to use care and diligence in the premises, the petition complains of defendant as follows:

[678]*678“Plaintiff further states that on or about the said 26th day of July, 1906, while its said goods were so stored with defendant, and kept by defendant in the basement of said warehouse, the basement of said warehouse containing said goods was flooded by water and said crystallized eggs of plaintiff came in contact and were saturated therewith and were greatly injured and damaged thereby; that defendant was warned of the danger and knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence in the discharge of its duties with respect to the storage of said eggs, could have known that its said basement, where the goods were kept, was flooded or being flooded with water and that said eggs were coming or liable to come in contact and be saturated therewith, in time to have removed the same to a place of safety and prevented the injury and damage aforesaid, which defendant by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence could have done and that said injury and damage to said crystallized eggs was caused by the negligence of defendant in the following particulars :
“1st. By its negligence in failing and refusing and neglecting to move said two hundred and thirty-nine barrels or any part thereof, containing said eggs, to an upper floor in said warehouse in a place of safety from said water, in which said upper floor there was then abundant room for said eggs, or to move same to some other place of safety, which defendant could have done after it knew of the imminent danger that threatened said eggs by the flow or accumulation of water in its said basement, by the exercise of ordinary and reasonable care and diligence in the conduct of its business.
"2nd. By its negligence in not removing said eggs from the basement of said warehouse to the upper floor thereof, where there was abundant room to store the same or to move the same to some more safe and suitable place during the long interval of time, amount[679]*679ing to some seven or eight hours, which elapsed after said defendant received notice that the water was liable to invade its said basement, and destroy, injure or damage said eggs and before said damage was done.
“3rd. By its negligence in failing to provide and maintain a safe and suitable place to store said eggs,- and by its failure to provide the room or place in which said goods were stored with proper safeguards to prevent surface water and other water from flowing into said place where the goods were stored as aforesaid.”

The answer admitted defendant’s incorporation and denied generally the other allegations of the petition. Following such general denial was a plea of assumption of risk, in that plaintiff at the time of the storage and long prior thereto had notice and knowledge of the character and construction of defendant’s warehouse and of its location and surroundings “and by reason thereof assumed all risk incident to and flowing from such construction, location and surroundings.” Following such plea was another in the nature of a defense of contributory negligence (or, volenti non fit injuria) in that plaintiff had knowledge of the character and constituents of the egg product described in the petition, but defendant had not; that after such product came in contact with water plaintiff could have avoided the injury and damage by reason of such knowledge but failed and neglected to properly care for said product, and the injury and damage suffered was due and owing to the failure and negligence of plaintiff to care for the product and not from its original cantact with water as alleged.

The reply put in issue the new matter in the answer.

The facts.

As the Arno splits Florence, even so Springfield is built on either side of a stream known locally as the “Jordan,” which, like its sacred namesake, “swells its banks” now and then. This Jordan is either tributary [680]*680to or is the headwaters of a historical stream, Wilson’s Creek. The locations and all regions round about referred to in this record, are in the valley and within the watershed of the Jordan. The lay of the land is such that the Jordan drains a large area, to-wit, part of Springfield- and its surrounding country. Down this stream, sometimes in its channel and sometimes out, is the principal sewer of the city, a twenty-four inch main laid underneath the surface of the channel when in the channel. Defendant’s plant, a large one of several departments, is devoted to the manufacturing of artificial ice and to cold storage and to warehousing purposes. At its nearest point it is, say, three hundred feet from the J ordan and the main sewer. Hard by the plant and running into the main sewer is a district sewer with an eight inch main. Running into this district sewer is a lateral or private sewer (hereinafter called a drain) with a six inch main draining defendant’s basement where the egg product was stored. Prom the floor of this basement to the point where the main sewer intakes from the district sewer is a fall of six feet and three inches. Said private drain connecting the basement with the district sewer is the rise of one hundred feet in length. It leaves the district sewer with what is called a “slow” or “low” grade of about one-sixteenth of an inch. As it approaches the basement the grade is sharper, to-wit, about one-eighth of an inch. When this private drain was connected up with the district sewer it was found that the grade was so low that hot water from defendant’s ice plant, entering the district sewer through another drain, followed in the drain towards the basement for fifty or sixty feet. Prom thence onward toward the basement the better grade stopped the back flow of water. There was no device in the basement to keep sewer backwater out of it. There was a device in the basement to keep out sewer gas, and this same device, a bell trap, was arranged to let water out of the [681]*681basement and keep it drained, as we gather, from water used in washing the basement, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 772, 259 Mo. 664, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-crystallized-egg-co-v-springfield-ice-refrigerating-co-mo-1914.