Van Bibber v. Swift & Co.

228 S.W. 69, 286 Mo. 317, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 18, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 69 (Van Bibber v. Swift & 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
Van Bibber v. Swift & Co., 228 S.W. 69, 286 Mo. 317, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 109 (Mo. 1921).

Opinions

This is a suit for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff from an explosion in a furnace in which oil was used for fuel in defendant's fertilizer plant at St. Joseph.

The charge of negligence in the petition is, in substance, that defendant carelessly maintained a shut-off device or valve in defective condition, so that the oil could not be completely turned off from the furnace, and negligently maintained its oil pipe without a strainer therein to prevent cinders, waste and dirt and other obstructions in the oil from passing into and clogging said shut-off device or valve, and causing it to leak. That said leaking device or valve permitted oil to flow into the heated furnace immediately after the flames had been extinguished, and thereby gas was formed, which caused an explosion, and injured plaintiff while oiling certain machinery in the performance of his duty.

The answer was a general denial.

Plaintiff's evidence tended to show: That he was about 40 years old. That he had been raised on a farm, and had long experience in handling and operating steam thrashers and the engines connected therewith. For some time prior to his injury, six or eight months, he having been injured on the 17th of November, 1916, he was engaged in the work of tending, as a machinist, the carrier and dryer devices used for carrying and drying *Page 322 the manure from which the fertilizer was manufactured by the defendant. That this carrier or conveyor moved the fresh manure and emptied it into a spout in the top of the furnace through which it fell into the dryer, a portion of which projected into and through the south end of the furnace. The furnace was about five or six feet wide, ten or twelve feet long, and eight or ten feet high; it ran north and south, the long way, the front being at the north end. The furnace was heated with fuel oil, and the purpose was to dry the manure in this dryer, and after it was sufficiently dry, to convey it to another apparatus or machine, where it was further prepared for use. The plaintiff had no connection with firing or operating the furnace, but his duties were confined to the machinery, and among other things, he was required to oil it.

McVey was the night watchman, but among his duties was that of lighting and firing the furnace about an hour every morning before the time for the day's work to commence. On this occasion, in accordance with his usual custom, McVey had started the furnace, and it was burning when the plaintiff arrived to begin work, which was about half past six o'clock in the morning. In order to oil certain portions of the machinery around and connected with the carrier, the plaintiff was obliged to go on top of the furnace, but he would always require that the fire in the furnace be put out before so doing. There was a ladder on the outside, at the northwest corner of the furnace, reaching an iron runway about three feet higher than the furnace, which extended to the south end of the furnace, where the carrier, which plaintiff intended to oil, was located. Plaintiff signified his intention to McVey to go on top of the furnace to oil, and while he was standing at the ladder ready to ascend, McVey attempted to turn down the shut-off valve so as to extinguish the fire. He watched McVey turn the stem of the valve, and apparently use exertion to turn it down as far as he could. But when McVey ceased his endeavors, *Page 323 although the fire went out, a stream of oil almost the size of a lead pencil was seen by the plaintiff to be still projecting itself some three to five inches from the end of the burner-pipe into the furnace. The plaintiff says that he also observed that the stem of the valve was not screwed down as far as it should go to completely close, because there was a portion of the bright part of it still visible, which would have been entirely hidden if it had been screwed clear down. Plaintiff says that he stood there talking to McVey and watching the oil spurt into the furnace in this manner from five to seven minutes, knowing that it was still hot, although the fire had been extinguished. McVey had also turned the steam off, which was used to atomize and spray the oil from the end of the burner-pipe into the furnace, but McVey did not turn the oil pump off, because plaintiff noticed that at every revolution of the pump the oil would spurt out into the furnace as above stated. Plaintiff said nothing to McVey about the oil leaking into the furnace, or not being completely shut off, or that the shut-off valve might be clogged up, which he knew, from previous experience, might be the case. But after watching the oil leak or spurt into the furnace from five to seven minutes, he ascended the ladder, walked over the top of the furnace on the iron walk to the south end, where he stood right over the open spout leading down into the furnace to the end of the manure dryer. Looking down this spout he saw some smoldering fire in the manure in the dryer. While at this point, endeavoring to oil the carrier, there was an explosion in the furnace, and he was lifted up into the air, grazed or struck a concrete I-beam above him, and from thence fell to the floor, some twenty-five feet away, alighting upon his feet, and sustaining the injuries complained of.

There was evidence on the part of the plaintiff that there were impurities, such as dirt and small particles of cinders in the fuel oil, and that there was originally a strainer in the oil pipe, which caught the impurities and *Page 324 prevented them from getting into the valve. But this strainer was removed about a year before plaintiff's injury, because it would get so clogged up with impurities itself as to prevent the oil from running through the pipe, and the fire would go out, after which the valves got clogged up occasionally and could not be entirely closed, so that they leaked. Plaintiff himself testified that a few days before his injury, the shut-off valve was clogged up with a cinder and he, himself, helped Fred Ingersoll, the operator of the furnace, take the valve apart and clean it. Ingersoll testified for plaintiff that both valves were out of order a few days before the injury. He took both valves out and cleaned them. He found a cinder in the shut-off valve, and a particle of waste in the needle valve. Ingersoll further testified on direct-examination, as follows: "Q. Did you ever use the needle valve to shut the oil off or turn it on? A. Use it occasionally, but it was most always too hot in front to use that needle valve, if it was burning; used the valve higher up. Q. Where was this valve down here you call the needle valve with reference to the opening out of the furnace? A. Directly in front of the hole in the furnace. Q. And you say it would get so hot that — what? A. You couldn't hold your hand there long enough to shut that burner off. Q. When the fire was burning, the method you had of controlling it, was by using this burner? A. Shutting off the top burner."

The furnace wall was about eight to twelve inches thick. There was an opening in the front wall about thirty inches above the floor, eight or ten inches square. In this opening was an iron plate set about four inches back from the face of the wall. There was a hole about the center of this plate, through which the burner-pipe projected about one inch. This hole was a few inches larger than the pipe, so that oil spurting from the end of it could be seen from the outside of the furnace. The needle valve was on this pipe directly in front of this opening in the iron plate. The shut-off valve was above *Page 325

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 69, 286 Mo. 317, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-bibber-v-swift-co-mo-1921.