State Ex Rel. F. T. O'Dell Construction Co. v. Hostetter

104 S.W.2d 671, 340 Mo. 1155, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 555
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 5, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 104 S.W.2d 671 (State Ex Rel. F. T. O'Dell Construction Co. v. Hostetter) 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
State Ex Rel. F. T. O'Dell Construction Co. v. Hostetter, 104 S.W.2d 671, 340 Mo. 1155, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 555 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

*1158 FRANK, P. J.

Certiorari to quash an opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals in the ease of Velma Buhrkuhl, Dependent of Thomas Buhrkuhl, Deceased Employee, Appellant, v. F. T. O’Dell Construction Company, Employer, and The Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York, Insurer, Respondents.

The case originated before the Workmen’s Compensation Commission. Claimant and deceased were husband arid wife: Deceased was employed on a road construction job in Ralls County. On August 11, 1932, he was struck by . lightning and killed. The award of the commission was in favor of claimant. The circuit court set the award aside. The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the circuit court and remanded the cause with directions to that court to enter up a new judgment affirming the award of the commission. The pertinent parts of the opinion of the Court of Appeals read as follows : '

“At the time in question the work was being carried on in the vicinity of the farm of Monroe Asher, and in fact at a point where the right of way for the road ran within seven feet of the corner of Asher’s barn. During the two weeks that the work had been in progress the Asher place had been looked upon as a ‘sort of headquarters’ for the construction project. Those of the men, including the foreman, who did not live in the neighborhood, customarily ate and slept in Asher’s house; all the men watered their teams at a well in his barn lot; and on two occasions at least when rains came up during the working, hours, they arid their teams were shown to have taken shelter in his barn or outbuildings.

“Shortly after the lunch hour on August 11, 1932, a heavy storm came up accompanied by a great amount of rain, lightning, thunder, and wind. Inasmuch as the force of the storm was evidently too great for work to be done during its progress, the foreman told his men to ‘go on and unhitch and hunt your shelter,’ whereupon they did *1159 unhitch their teams and at once proceeded to take shelter in Asher’s barn and other outbuildings as they had done under similar circumstances on the day before. It appears that the Asher barn and outbuildings constituted the only available shelter in the neighborhood, and it is a significant fact that on both days the foreman accompanied his men inside to seek protection from the elements. The significance of all this is that while there is no claim that the foreman told his men in so many words that they should take shelter on the Asher premises, yet it was so understood by all of them when he gave the order, and the' legal situation is therefore the same as though the foreman had specifically told the deceased to go into the barn where he was when he was killed.

“It is also a material fact upon the issue of whether the accident might be said to have occurred during the course of the employment that when the men were told to unhitch and hunt shelter, they were not dismissed from their employment for the day, but were expected to leave their shelter and return to their respective duties as soon as the rain should cease falling.

“Upon the order to unhitch, some few of the men took shelter in a granary or shed, but four of them, including the deceased and the foreman, went inside the barn with their teams to await-the end of the storm. The testimony shows that aside from the four men, there were sixteen horses inside the barn, in which, in addition, Ashér was housing a tractor and a plow. It appears also that the barn had the usual loft in which some 660 bales of hay were stored.

“Whatever may have been its importance upon the question of her right to compensation, the dependent undertook to lay considerable stress on the fact that the men and horses were closely crowded together in the barn, and that both men and horses were dripping wet from the rain. At any rate, while huddled together in the barn in such a fashion, a bolt of lightning struck the barn killing the deceased and six of the horses, but fortunately inflicting no substantial injury upon any other man or beast. The tractor was not damaged by the lightning, and was' removed from the barn before the same was burned to the ground. The plow, however, had apparently been struck by the lightning, and was burned beyond all recognition.

“So far as the lay of the land is concerned, the Asher place is in the. open country, with the nearest hill an eighth of a mile away, and the nearest woods a mile distant. In the immediate vicinity, in addition to the barn in which the deceased was killed, there was the farmhouse, together with a shed or granary. There was evidence to show that the three buildings in question sat upon ground which was slightly elevated about the surrounding terrain, and that the barn, which was about 25 feet in height, was the tallest of the three buildings in the group. It was also shown that while the storm was quite a *1160 general one, with flashes of lightning in evidence in all directions, yet the Asher barn was the only object struck during the storm for many miles around.

‘ ‘ The dependent-' predicates her right to compensation upon the theory that the act of the deceased in seeking shelter from the storm (and particularly so at his foreman’s direction), did not serve to interrupt the course of his employment, and that his death by being struck by lightning was by accident arising out of his employment, inasmuch as his presence in the barn, under all the circumstances shown in evidence, intensified and magnified the risk to which he was subjected from the danger of the elements, over and above that to which he would otherwise have reasonably been exposed but for his employment. This is indeed a generally recognized doctrine of the law of compensation, and if it may be said that there was sufficient competent evidence adduced to warrant the belief that the employment of the deceased did result in his excessive exposure to the common risk from lightning, then the award of the commission in favor of the dependent should obviously be affirmed. [Van Kirk v. Hume-Sinclair Coal Mining Co., 226 Mo. App. 1137, 49 S. W. (2d) 631.]

‘ ‘ To this the employer and insurer counter with the suggestion that the stroke of lightning which killed the deceased was a danger common to the neighborhood and in no sense peculiar to the employment, and that the death of the deceased was therefore the direct result of an act of God so as to exclude the dependent’s right to compensation therefor.

“As regards the questioh of the legal sufficiency of such a defense, it sufficies to say that the defense of act of God applies no less to a compensation case than to the ordinary action at common law for damages, which is to say in this case, as we have indeed already pointed out, that if the death of the deceased was attributable solely to the injurious effects of the forces of nature unmixed with any peculiar risk to which the employment gave rise, then there could be no liability to the dependent for compensation, but that if the employment of the deceased did subject him to a risk and hazard from such forces of nature over and above that to which the general public was exuosed, or, to put it another way, if the act of God concurred and collaborated with conditions peculiarly attendant upon the employment to bring about the death, then.the dependent is clearly entitled to recover the death benefit as against the defense here interposed.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.W.2d 671, 340 Mo. 1155, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-f-t-odell-construction-co-v-hostetter-mo-1937.