Wagner v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co.

75 S.W. 966, 177 Mo. 44, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 966 (Wagner v. Edison Electric Illuminating 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
Wagner v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co., 75 S.W. 966, 177 Mo. 44, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 183 (Mo. 1903).

Opinions

BRACE, J.

This case is certified here from the St. Louis Court of Appeals, upon the dissent of one of the judges of that court, to the decision of a majority thereof, in an opinion by Bland, P. J., reported in 82 Mo. App. 287. A copy of that opinion, affirming the judgment of the circuit court in favor of the plaintiff, without additional argument or brief, is filed by his counsel in support of that judgment, and may be taken for the statement of the case. It is as follows:

“In 1896 the Municipal Assembly of the city of St. Louis passed Ordinance No. 18680 (known as the ‘Keyes’ ordinance), which required electric light and power companies doing business within the district bounded by the river and Twenty-second street, "Wash and Spruce streets, to bury their wires under ground, and forbidding the use of poles, etc., above ground within the designated territory after December 31,1898. The ordinance provided certain privileges to persons and corporations complying with its terms. The defendant, the Phoenix Light, Heat and Power Company, the Missouri Electric Light & Power Company, and the St. Louis Electric Light and Power Company qualified under the ordinance, and presented to the Board of Public Improvements of the city their several plans for construction of underground conduits. These plans were located in many instances on the same streets and alleys in the district-, for which the several companies were compelled to construct jointly, by order of the Board of Public Improvements in the exercise of a power delegated to it by the ordinance. The above-mentioned companies on April 17, 1897, entered into a single but several contract with the National Conduit-Construction Company of St. Louis and two other con[50]*50struotion companies, for the underground conduits to be used by them jointly. This contract provided for a construction committee of four members, one to be selected from each of the four companies, to which all disputes between the said companies and the construction companies should be referred for final decision. No engineer was named in this contract for these several companies, yet the contract in numerous places refers to one, and certain powers are given him with respect to supervision and approval of the work,' showing that the appointment of such an’ engineer was contemplated by all the parties to the contract. The conduits are roughly described in the evidence as similar to a large gun barrel with numerous circular spaces extending its entire length, with the ducts of each company, varying in number according to its needs, but made inseparable from the ducts of the other companies, so that the ducts of one could not be removed without removing all; so that the surveys, plans, supervision permits and all that appertained to the construction of the conduits were both the joint and individual undertaking of the four companies. The committee provided for in the contract was made up of E. Y. Matlack, representing the defendant; A. Ross, representing the Phoenix Company; D. W. Guernsey, representing the St. Louis Company; and plaintiff, representing the Missouri Company. On April 30,1897, the committee organized by electing Wagner chairman, and Ross secretary, and adopted rules for the conduct of its proceedings, among which was one providing that no motion could be carried unless it received three votes in the affirmative. On May 7, 3897, Mr. Ross moved that Wagner be appointed engineer to supervise the underground work as provided for in the contract of April 17, 1897. The motion was seconded by Guernsey. On vote being-taken, all voted aye, except Mr. Matlack who voted no, and Wagner was declared duly appointed engineer. Mr. Wagner appointed the other gentlemen of the com[51]*51mittee, a committee of three to outline and define the duties of the engineer. A majority and minority report was made; the majority report was adopted by the full committee, Matlack voting in the negative. Briefly stated, the majority report as adopted required the engineer to provide all plans for construction; to secure permits therefor from the Board of Public Improvements, and to have general supervision, over the work provided for in the contract of April 17, 1897. The committee in behalf of the several companies in interest then gave to the Board of Public Improvements the following notice:
“ ‘ St. Louis, Mo., May 11, 1897.
“ ‘To the Hon. Board of Public Improvements of the city of St. Louis:
“ ‘Gentlemen: The undersigned'companies have appointed Mr. Herbert A. Wagner engineer for the construction of their conduits, under authority of Ordinance No. 18680. You will please deliver permits for conduits to him or his order.
“ ‘Very respectfully;
“ ‘Missouri Electric Light & Power Co. &
“ ‘Edison Illuminating Co. of St. Louis,
‘ ‘ ‘ The Electric Light, Power & Conduit Co.,
“S. B. Pike, Secretary.
“ ‘The Phoenix Light, Heat & Power Co.,
“ ‘A. Ross, President.
‘ ‘ ‘ The Edison Illuminating Co. of Carondelet,
“ ‘E. V. Matlack, Secretary.
“ ‘St. Louis Electric Light & Power Co.,
“ ‘D. W. Geurnsey, President.’
“Each block of street where it was planned to construct the conduit was obstructed by underground gas and water pipes, and in some instances by sewers; these it was necessary to go over or under without disturbing them, hence great care was required and a study of the city records as to location of these obstructions and the preparation of maps and drawings show[52]*52ing their location, depth, etc., was necessary. All this was done under the supervision of Wagner, and a special preliminary plan of each block was made and furnished to each company. From these preliminary plans final plans were prepared by Wagner acceptable to all the companies, and then submitted to the Board of Public Improvements for the purposes of getting permits for the construction of the conduit. Of this work about twenty plans were prepared for each block; to prepare them required the work of four or five draughtsmen for a year; all the measurements were taken by Wagner, or by an engineer acting under him, and a record made of them; monthly estimates of the work'was made by or under his [Wagner’s] supervision, and submitted to the construction committee, on which monthly payments to the contractor were made; a large number of inspectors were employed to watch the contractor; these reported to Wagner and were assigned to duty by him, and all orders to the contractor came from Wagner. An office force of clerks, draughtsmen and inspectors, and a force of under-engineers were furnished by the respective companies, but all acted as a unit, and worked under the order and control of Wagner as engineer in chief. The labor was not only great, but also, as to the work of the engineer, it had to be skillful and exact to meet the requirements of the ordinance and to leave undisturbed the existing underground obstructions. The responsibility for plans, measurements and successful construction, were all on Wagner as engineer in chief, and he supervised and directed all.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 966, 177 Mo. 44, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-edison-electric-illuminating-co-mo-1903.