Young v. Kansas City Power and Light Co.

773 S.W.2d 120, 1989 WL 56532
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 30, 1989
DocketWD 40229
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 773 S.W.2d 120 (Young v. Kansas City Power and Light 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
Young v. Kansas City Power and Light Co., 773 S.W.2d 120, 1989 WL 56532 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

CLARK, Judge.

Plaintiffs as trustees for Best Buy Home Center, Inc., a former Missouri corporation, 1 sued Kansas City Power and Light Company (KCPL) for damages incurred when the building Best Buy occupied was damaged by a fire and the contents were destroyed. The suit was based on a claim that the fire was electrical in origin and the result of a shorted circuit in the KCPL meter box. KCPL disputed the fire’s origin and also contended that faulty interior wiring was a contributing factor in the loss. The case was tried to a jury which found damages to be in the amount of $230,000.00 with fault apportioned 60% to Best Buy and 40% to KCPL. Both parties appeal.

The Best Buy store, offering hardware and miscellaneous merchandise for sale at retail, was located in a 75 foot by 50 foot building in Glasgow, Missouri. The exteri- or walls were concrete with reinforced steel. Atop the concrete walls were steel beams to which were fastened 2x8 plates bolted to the beams. These plates served to anchor roof joists spaced at 16 inch intervals. The roof was formed by wood sheathing fastened to the joists and coated with tar. Electrical wiring enclosed in steel conduit was, at some points, secured to the 2x8 plates and at one point, according to Best Buy, was in contact with a bolt which fastened the plate to the steel beam. It was Best Buy’s theory that the fire started when current in the conduit generated heat by contact with the anchor bolt. The conduit was itself energized, according to Best Buy, because of a fault in the meter box.

The evidence in the case was undisputed that on October 25, 1982, an employee of the telephone company was working in an alley east of the Best Buy store, and as he was driving his truck through the area, the truck ladder rack struck one of the electric meters which served the store. The force of the impact knocked the meter itself from the metal meter box and disrupted power service to the Best Buy store. After that incident, an employee of KCPL replaced the meter and resealed the box. The damaged box was not replaced.

*123 The meter box in this case, and that generally used by KCPL, is a container with a face cover in which a circular opening allows display of the meter. Inside the box are two wire support bails secured by rivets. When a meter is installed, it is plugged into the box, the meter rests on the support of the bails and the bails fit inside the bottom ring of the meter. The closing of the box face cover holds the meter in place from the front. A meter normally cannot be removed from a meter box without first lifting the face cover or lid of the box. For the meter to come out without removing the box cover, it would be necessary for the meter to be rotated, pushing down on the bails. That process could pop out the rivets holding the bails. Best Buy postulated that had occurred when the meter box was struck by the telephone company truck.

On September 2, 1984, some twenty-three months after the incident with the telephone truck, a fire occurred at the Best Buy store. When firemen arrived, they encountered dense black smoke and heat, but for some time they were unable to locate the fire itself. Eventually the fire burned through the roof on the west side of the building about midway from the front of the structure. It continued along that wall to the rear and across to the east wall where it moved back to the front before it was contained.

Soon after the fire had been brought under control, a KCPL employee arrived and disconnected electric service in the area. To restore power to other customers, it was necessary for him to enter the Best Buy meter box. When he did so, he found the left meter bail in contact both with the normally neutral part of the box and also with the energized part. The rivets normally holding the bail were not in place. There was indication of electrical arcing. The undisturbed seal on the meter box indicated that it had not been entered since the meter had been replaced in October of 1982. The facts stated above were not in dispute. The question of how the fire originated and whether it was attributable to some malfunction in the KCPL meter box was. The answer to the question depended on reconstruction of events, assumptions and expert opinion. An understanding of the basis for Best Buy’s cause of action requires a somewhat extended recapitulation of the thesis proposed by Best Buy’s expert witness, Dr. Wes Sherman.

Dr. Sherman was given the facts summarized above and he also conducted his own investigation, particularly with respect to a section of conduit in which the wires had completely melted. It was Sherman’s conclusion that the conduit had been in contact with one of the bolts used to hold the wood 2x8 plates to the steel roof support beams and a short circuit had started the fire. This was the result of an electrical current between the conduit and the bolt generating enough heat to ignite the wood plate. The source of that current was, according to Sherman, the abnormally positioned bail in the KCPL meter box.

According to Sherman, the path of the current which started the fire ran from the point of contact between the conduit and the bolt to a junction box, through armored cable to the furnace where it connected to a neutral wire, then back through the neutral wire to the electric service panel, through the wall to the meter base to the grounded portion of that base and then back to the energized line. The latter connection was made because the misplaced meter bail served as a conductor between the neutral or grounded portion of the meter base and the energized line. The bolt in the beam was connected to ground, completing the circuit, because the beam rested on the concrete wall containing reinforcing rods.

Under the above analysis, Dr. Sherman gave his opinion that the transfer of current depended entirely on the arcing which occurred when the meter bail was dislodged and the eventual welding of the bail touching on one side the normally neutral part of the meter box and on the other side, an energized point. Had that welding not occurred, Dr. Sherman did not believe a fire would have resulted.

THE APPEAL BY KANSAS CITY POWER AND LIGHT

In their first point, KCPL contends plaintiffs did not make a submissible case *124 because they did not prove the meter support bail was dislodged when the box was struck by the telephone company truck.

The evidence most favorable to plaintiffs, and essentially uncontested, was that the meter box was struck by the truck with sufficient force to knock out the meter with the lid still in place. For this to occur, the rotation of the meter creates pressure on the bails sufficient to pop out the rivets securing them. The KCPL repairman, Gilkeson, who replaced the meter did not remember checking the bails and he does not routinely do so. When the box was opened after the fire, one meter bail was abnormally positioned. The seal on the meter box placed there by Gilkeson was still in place indicating that no one had entered the box after Gilkeson installed the new meter. This evidence entitled the jury to conclude that the damage to the bail was caused when the meter box was struck by the truck and the damage was not detected when Gilkeson installed the new meter. The point is denied.

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Bluebook (online)
773 S.W.2d 120, 1989 WL 56532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-kansas-city-power-and-light-co-moctapp-1989.