Williams v. United States Incandescent Lamp Co.

157 S.W. 130, 173 Mo. App. 87, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 666
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 130 (Williams v. United States Incandescent Lamp Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. United States Incandescent Lamp Co., 157 S.W. 130, 173 Mo. App. 87, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 666 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

—This is an action by the plaintiff to recover damages for injuries sustained by her while in the employ of the defendant. It appears that plaintiff was a scrub woman in the offices of the defendant company, her employment being to clean and take care of defendant’s offices. There was a coal stove in this office to which an ordinary stovepipe was attached, running up a couple of lengths and then with an elbow and a length or more of pipe, running into the pipe hole in the wall or chimney of the office. On the day of the accident and a short time before it happened, some of the young women in the office complained of lack of heat, there being1 no fire in the stove,' and asked plaintiff to make a fire. Not finding any coal she made a fire with kindling and blocks of wood, and left the room. A short time afterwards she heard some one in this room screaming and went into it. She testified that she found a part of this pipe lying on the floor. She also testifies that she had noticed that the pipe was not securely in place; that on a former occasion it had fallen to the floor, and that she had called the attention of the manager of defendant to this and to the fact that the pipe as set up was liable [92]*92to fall, but that nothing had been done toward supporting the pipe. When she entered the room, as before stated, plaintiff, according to her testimony, saw sparks and flames escaping from that part of the stovepipe still in place. She picked up the fallen joints and attempted to put them in place. The pipe was hot, “red hot,” says plaintiff, and she protected her hands against -the heat by using a burlap apron .which she was wearing. To put the pipe in place she climbed up on a chair and apparently rested on that and on the stove. While she was in this position and endeavoring to push the pipe together, she fell over backwards, striking against a desk, and sustained the injuries of which she complains. Without describing, those injuries, it is sufficient to say that according to her testimony and that of a physician who attended her, they are very serious and are permanent, such as to greatly diminish the earning capacity of plaintiff. Plaintiff testified that the room in which this stove was located was filled with loose excelsior and packing of different kinds; that there were valuable materials, which she had been told were worth their weight in gold, used by the defendant company in the manufacture of its lamps, stored there, and that this office was occupied by the manager and three young women stenographers, while on the floor immediately above there were some thirty young women operatives and several other employees in other parts of the building at the time; that the only mode of egress from the building for those on the upper floors was down a narrow stairway, which passed by the door of this office, and that she was afraid that the sparks and flames going up from the disconnected stovepipe would set fire to the material in the room in which was the stove, and if not checked would go through the ceiling, set fire to the building and endanger the lives of the employees and the property of her employer. She testified that her employment was to look after anything that had [93]*93to be done in connection with keeping np the fire in this stove and generally discharge snch duties as a charwoman is supposed to do in the course of her employment.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence defendant offered a demurrer which was overruled. It then introduced its own evidence. It may be said of this that it flatly contradicted a great many of the most material statements of plaintiff; for instance, defendant’s witnesses testified very positively that the pipe had not fallen down at all but that one joint had only separated two or three inches from another joint or from the elbow; that plaintiff had been'cautioned not to attempt to replace it and told that there were other people around whose duty it was to do that and who had been summoned but that she persisted in her attempt to replace the pipe.

At the conclusion of the evidence defendant again renewed its demurrer which was overruled. The jury, after having been instructed by the court, returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $3500, judgment following. Filing its motion for new trial and excepting to that being overruled, defendant has duly perfected its appeal to this court.

The negligence charged in the petition is the failure of defendant to properly secure this pipe and the reason given by plaintiff for acting in the manner she did was the imminent danger which she feared to the property of defendant and to its employees. The petition further contains the averment that plaintiff sustained the burns and bruises which she had received without any fault or negligence on her part.

The answer was a general denial.

This was clearly a case for the jury, and if the instructions given were correct and those refused properly refused, we are not at liberty to disturb its verdict, of which we may say, that considering the injury which respondent, according to the testimony, un[94]*94doubtedly received, was not excessive. Furthermore, this is the second verdict for a like amount that plaintiff, respondent here, has recovered in this case. That, of course, is not controlling on us, but is suggestive in answer to the complaint that the verdict is excessive and evidence of passion and prejudice.

We see no reversible error in the instructions given at the instance of plaintiff and by the court of its own motion.

The court, in the first instruction given at the instance of plaintiff, covered the facts of the case properly. It.told the jury, after a general summary of the issue, that if the jury found that the pipe had come apart through the negligence of defendant so that the joint, together with the elbow, fell down, leaving part of the stovepipe standing in an upright position and the fire and flames were then and there being emitted from and coming out of the stovepipe, and the building by reason thereof was about to catch fire therefrom and be burned and that the lives of defendant’s employees were- by reason thereof in peril and danger and that plaintiff was at that time an employee of defendant and in order to save the lives of defendant’s employees picked up the joint of stovepipe, got npon a chair or chairs to replace it and failed in her attempt and then in order to save the lives of defendant’s employees pushed or pulled or knocked the stovepipe down off of the stove and in doing so and while in the exercise of ordinary care fell from the -chair and against a desk to the floor and was thereby injured, their verdict should be for plaintiff.

Instructing the jury as to the measure of damages, the court of its own motion told the jury that the burden of proof was on plaintiff to establish by the preponderance or greater weight of evidence the facts necessary to a verdict in her favor under the instructions given. The court also correctly instructed as to the credibility of witnesses and the meaning of the [95]*95term “burthen of proof.” By the fifth instruction the court told the jury that unless they found from the evidence that the stovepipe separated and that this resulted from negligence on the part of defendant, and if they further found that plaintiff attempted to replace it under circumstances which indicated to a reasonable person in her position that it was necessary to replace the stovepipe in order to save the lives of defendant’s employees from peril and danger, their verdict should be for defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 130, 173 Mo. App. 87, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-united-states-incandescent-lamp-co-moctapp-1913.