State Ex Rel. Kansas City Light & Power Co. v. Trimble

285 S.W. 455, 315 Mo. 32, 49 A.L.R. 1047, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 944
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 14, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 455 (State Ex Rel. Kansas City Light & Power Co. v. Trimble) 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. Kansas City Light & Power Co. v. Trimble, 285 S.W. 455, 315 Mo. 32, 49 A.L.R. 1047, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 944 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*34 GRAVES, J .

Certiorari to the Kansas City Court of Appeals on the ground of conflict of opinions. The case out of which this proceeding grows (John G. Miller, Respondent, v. Kansas City Light & Power Co., appellant) has had a long and checkered career. When the case of Miller v. Kansas City Light & Power Co. was tried in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, the plaintiff had judgment for $7,000. The defendant appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, and there (without going into the merits of the case) the judgment was affirmed upon an alleged defect in appellant’s abstract of record, without a consideration of the merits of the case. The Kansas City Light & Power Company, as relator, in State ex rel. v. Trimble, 303 Mo. 284, asked this court, by its writ of mandamus, to compel the Kansas City Court of Appeals to hear and determine the ease upon the merits. We ruled that the record was sufficient, and by our writ of mandamus compelled the Kansas City Court of Appeals to determine the case upon the merits. [State ex rel. v. Trimble, 303 Mo. 284.] Later the court did undertake to determine the merits, and by a majority opinion affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. To this opinion Judge Trimble filed a vigorous dissent. Notice was given that application would be made for a writ of certiorari to this court. To thwart this action, Miller, the plaintiff, sought an injunction in the U. S. District Court at Kansas City, to prevent the prosecution of an application for a writ of certiorari in this court. A temporary restraining order was issued, but upon motion such order was dissolved' within a few days, and the application for our writ of certiorari was, within due time filed, prosecuted, and our writ granted. Later the said Miller appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, and this appeal had been argued, and was pending when we heard the argument here, in the instant case. We delayed opinion out of respect for the U. S. Court of Appeals. Our opinion in State ex rel. v. Trimble, 303 Mo. 284 (in the U. S. Court of Appeals), was severely criticized by and through the youthful exuberance of counsel for Miller, but the court, meeting all contentions of counsel, fully sustained our opinion. [Miller v. Kansas City Light & Power Co., 13 Fed. (2 d) 723.] Being temporarily restrained from filing an application here for writ of certiorari, counsel for the Light & Power Company filed an application for and got our alternative writ in mandamus to compel the Kansas City Court of Appeals to certify the case of Miller *35 v. Kansas City Light & Power Company to this court. Such case is here, and has been argued, and is our number 26477. "We are concerned, however, solely in the disposition of the ease in certiorari, as the mandamus case fell to another. So much for preliminary history. In this case there is a plea to our jurisdiction, all of which was fully threshed out by Van Valkenburgh, Circuit Judge, in the U. S. Court of Appeals, supra. The question needs no further notice by us in view of the elaborate opinion of Judge Van Valkenburgh, which had the full concurrence of that court. We shall not discuss this dead issue.

I. There are two opinions in the ease out of which this proceeding grows. Judge Trimble filed a vigorous dissent, in which the law of the case (in our judgment) was written. However, in this proceeding in certiorari we go to the majority opinion for the facts. Much is said in the majority opinion about our opinion in the first mandamus case, but this has nothing to do with the real matter in issue here now. However, in passing it will suffice to say that the majority opinion has'wholly misconceived our cases, as is thoroughly demonstrated by the learned opinion of Judge Van Valkenburgh, supra. We quote in full the facts from the majority opinion, as follows:

“Proceeding now to a consideration of the case on its merits, we find the record discloses the following:
“At the time of his death Marvin Miller was an unmarried minor past fourteen years of age. He was bright, intelligent, healthy and did well in his school. In summer he lived with his father on a farm in Platte County, and from the time he was seven or eight years of age he had resided during the winter months with his sister at 5012 Walrond Avenue and attended school in Kansas City, Missouri. He met his death at about 9 :15 p. m. October 31, 1919, upon a telephone and electric light pole set in the parking on the south side of Forty-ninth Street and a little east of its intersection with Walrond Avenue. Forty-ninth Street runs east and west and intersects Walrond Avenue at right angles. The night was rainy and misty.
“The pole upon which the boy lost his life was the property of the Kansas City Home Telephone Company. The line of poles of which this was one ran east and west on the south side of Forty-ninth Street, and the poles were set in the parking space between the sidewalk and the pavement. About seventeen feet from the ground, the Missouri & Kansas Telephone Company (known as the Bell System) had attached to the south side of said pole and running east and west, a hundred-pair cable one and five-eights inches in diameter, encased in lead armor, said cable being supported by means of rings by a five-sixteenth-inch messenger wire. This messenger wire was *36 fastened to the pole. Just opposite the Bell eablé and parallel thereto the Home Telephone Company had a similar cable similarly attached to the pole, and at the same height from the ground.
“The Home Telephone Company had placed iron steps on the pole, alternating the north and south sides thereof, beginning ten feet from the ground and extending up as far as the telephone cables only. These alternating steps were about eighteen inches apart and in climbing the pole one took an eighteen-inch step. Later the Bell Telephone Company placed wooden cleats or steps on the pole beginning about eighteen inches from the ground and alternating on the east and west sides thereof up to where the iron steps began. So that it was necessary for a climber to go first, up the wooden steps thus located to the iron steps, and there swing around and continue the ascent on the iron steps located on the north and south sides of the pole as above indicated.
“At the very top of the pole and at a distance of four or five fe'et above the telephone cables was attached a glass insulator carrying a single arc-circuit wire of the Kansas City Light & Power Company for street lights, and which lighted the street light on the corner at the west side of Walrond'Avenue. This light wire was parallel with the telephone cables.
“The evidence shows that when the Kansas City Light & Power Company originally put this wire there it was covered with a waterproof insulation, consisting of a burlap cloth wrapping saturated with a ruber-compound insulating material; but at the time of the accident the insulation was entirely missing for a distance of about one foot from the glass insulator on the top of the pole.
“On Halloween, 1919, about nine o’clock, some Girl Scouts were having a party in a house across the street from the light pole in question.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 455, 315 Mo. 32, 49 A.L.R. 1047, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kansas-city-light-power-co-v-trimble-mo-1926.