176 Mo. App. 716 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff on account of personal injuries received through the alleged negligence of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
Respondent’s counsel have prepared, and we copy from their brief, a full, clear' and concise statement of the facts touching the controversy. The statement so referred to is as follows:
“In this case the respondent sues for personal injuries sustained by him by being burned on November 25, 1910, in defendant’s factory on Jefferson avenue
“On November 25, 1910, plaintiff Bryan had had some trouble in getting proper results from the automatic machines on a certain kind of filament and during the forenoon of that day he and Miss Brown were working on those filaments on one of the old machines. During the course of the afternoon, while he and Miss Brown were still working on the machine treating filaments, plaintiff Bryan was called by his duties to another department of the factory, and when he went out he told Miss Lillian Taylor, the forewoman in the room, to have Miss Brown, when she had finished the batch she was on, to go to spot testing. At this time Mr. Budde was not in the room. When plaintiff Bryan got back, in about an hour or an hour and a half, Mr. Budde was there working on a valve for one of the au
“The specifications of negligence had reference to the maintenance of the open light under the boiler in the room when gasoline vapor was being, and was likely to be discharged thereinto and in connection with the bottle and box and light arrangement as the means for producing the gasoline vapor. The court gave one instruction for the plaintiff on the right to recover and gave five on behalf of the defendant. There was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff 'for $5000', and after ineffectually moving for new trial, the defendant brings the case .to this court on appeal, complaining only of the action of the court in the matter of instructions.”
There are several specifications of negligence in the petition but some of them were abandoned at the trial, and it appears plaintiff relied upon the averment touching the maintenance of an open and exposed gas flame in the room, together with a dangerous contrivance, consisting of a bottle of gasoline in a small box under the machine, in which gasoline vapor was generated through the employment of an electric lamp in the box with the bottle, .and the consequent blowing of the cork from the bottle by means of the gas so generated, which operated to emit a sufficient quantity of gasoline vapor to. occasion the ignition through coming in contact with the open or exposed gas flame. So, therefore, it appears the specifications of negligence relied upon for a recovery relate, first, to the exposed gas flame under the boiler and, second, to the dangerous contrivance, consisting of a bottle of gasoline and an electric lamp in a box which caused the blowing out of the cork and consequent emission of gasoline vapor from the bottle. The concurrence of the two matters thus specified operated, through the meeting of the gasoline vapor thus released and the exposed gas flame, to occasion the flame which enveloped the
But one instruction with regard to the right of recovery was given on the part of plaintiff. That instruction is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff received the injuries testified to by him by reason of gasoline vapor in one of the defendant’s factory rooms taking fire, and that in said factory room there was an unprotected gas flame, and for the purpose of supplying gasoline vapor for the treatment of carbon filaments for electric lamps the defendant provided for each of one or more of its machines a bottle containing gasoline which, with an electric lamp, was enclosed in a box, and that by reason of said facts the stopper in the bottle was likely to and often did blow out, thereby increasing the amount of gasoline vapor in the atmosphere in the room, and that by reason of said facts the said bottle and light contained in said box was a negligent, dangerous and unsafe contrivance and means for providing gasoline vapor for use in said machines, and that the defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care on its part would have known, those facts at and prior to the time the plaintiff was injured and’ that plaintiff’s injuries were directly due to such negligent, dangerous and unsafe contrivance and means for providing said gasoline vapor in conjunction with said unprotected gas flame, if you believe there was such unprotected gas flame, and if you further find and believe from the evidence that the burning of said gasoline vapor was occasioned by said unprotected gas flame, then your verdict must be in favor of plaintiff, provided you further believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety.” (The italics are our own.)
By the first part of the instruction, a number of uncontroverted facts are hypothesized, and then the jury are directed, through reference to the first line of-the instruction, that if it believed from the evidence that by reason of “said facts” the stopper in the bottle was likely to and often did blow out, etc. The use of the words “said facts” in this connection is somewhat obscure, for it is certain all of the preceding facts referred to bore no relation to the blowing out of the stopper; but the preceding facts are uncontroverted in the case, and we would not condemn the instruction for this alone, though, as said, it is not clear. This, part of the instruction, it seems, requires the jury to find “that the stopper in the bottle was likely to and often did blow out, thereby increasing the amount of.
It is entirely clear that, on a specification of negligence with respect to this matter, plaintiff is not entitled to recover on account of the emission of gasoline vapors from other machines, touching which no averment of negligence appears. Therefore, though it be that the evidence is uncontradicted that the stopper did blow out of the bottle twice immediately before the explosion, it is- not conceded in the case that the gas thus emitted through the alleged negligent contrivance occasioned the flames which burned plaintiff, for it may be that such flame would have come about as well from the vapor being emitted by the other machines and through the. raising of the bell-shaped glass jar on the table over the alleged offending, and its companion, machine. This being true, it is manifest that the generation of gasoline gas or vapor in the bottle, through the alleged negligent contrivance of the bottle and electric lamp enclosed in the box, the blowing out of the stopper because of it, and the sudden emission of a quantity of gas constitute, in part, the very gravamen of plaintiff’s case, for it is this co-operating together with the open gas flame in the room which the petition avers caused the injury. Therefore, it is, of course, essential for the jury to find that plaintiff’s injuries resulted in part from the cause so averred, for where, specific acts of negligence are alleged it is essential to confine the case thereto. [See McManamee v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 135 Mo. 440, 447, 37 S. W. 119.] In other words, in such cases the instructions should submit to the jury the issues they are to .try. It will not suffice to permit a recovery on any unspecified theory of negligence whatsoever,, but the jury should find the fact which constitutes the.
The instruction employs the words “said facts” in several places, as before said, which would seem to imply that the matters preceding this expression were conceded as facts and not at issue in the case. However, it may be said of this that so many of the facts in the case are nncontroverted that this alone might not amount to reversible error, in so far as the employment of the first two expressions of “said facts” is concerned. The third reference complained of in the instruction is to “those facts.” In the latter part of the instruction, after having required the jury to find that defendant knew of the condition, it proceeds ‘ ‘ or by the exercise of ordinary care on its part, would have known ‘those facts’ at and prior to the time plaintiff was injured and that plaintiff’s injuries were directly due to such negligent, dangerous and unsafe contrivances.” The words underscored when considered in the context employed together with the statements of “said facts” and the subsequent statement of “those facts” immediately preceding them seem to assume that the contrivance was negligent, dangerous and unsafe. At any rate, these words thus employed were likely to mislead the jury, in view of the general, vague and indefinite frame of the instruction, to believe that the contrivance was a negligent and dangerous one, whether or no. Such an assumption in an instruction
For the reasons above pointed out, the judgment' should be reversed and the cause remanded. • It is so ordered.