124 Mo. 87 | Mo. | 1894
This is an action for damages brought by Carolina Boettger, for the death of her husband Ferdinand or Frank Boettger, who lost his life on the nineteenth day of April, 1892, while in the employment of the defendant. The plaintiff had judgment in the court below for $3,000, and the defendant appeals.
Plaintiff’s cause of action as stated in the petition is, “that on the nineteenth of April, 1892, the said deceased was in the employ of defendant in the capacity of a common laborer, whose duty it was to perform such work as might be required of him; that on said day he was ordered by defendant to work upon a scaffold around a tower of a high building, in the city of St. Louis in accordance with directions given him. That it was the duty of the defendant to furnish him with good and reasonably safe and sufficient material for and see that the said scaffold, upon which he was required to work was in a reasonably safe condition; but that defendant, wholly neglecting and disregarding
The answer contained a general denial and the following special plea: “And for further answer the defendant says that the said Frank Boettger came to his death by reason of his own negligence directly contributing thereto. That it was his duty as such employee of this defendant to construct, together with fellow servants, the scaffold in question, and the said scaffold was in course of construction when said Boettger came to his death, and said Boettger met his death while assisting in the construction of said scaffold, and that the lumber out of which said scaffold was being constructed, was selected and prepared for said purpose by said Boettger, and if the material was defective it was owing to the negligence of the said Boettger in selecting and preparing and putting it to such use.” The reply was a general denial.
At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant demurred to the evidence. The demurrer was overruled, and renewed at the close of all the evidence and again overruled, and the cause submitted to the
The court of its own motion gave the following instructions:
“1. In this suit the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the death of her husband, which, she alleges, was caused by the negligence of defendant. The act of negligence which the plaintiff charges against the defendant is that of furnishing defective material with which to build the scaffold in question. The defendant denies that it was guilty of negligence as charged, and it avers also that the plaintiff’s husband was himself guilty of negligence which contributed to cause the accident which resulted in his death.
“2. The act of negligence which plaintiff charges that plaintiff’s husband was guilty of is that he'himself selected and prepared the lumber that went into.the scaffold.
“3. It will be necessary, therefore, for you to decide, under the evidence and these instructions, whether or not the defendant was guilty of the act of negligence charged against it, as above mentioned, and, if yea, then whether or not that negligence caused plaintiff’s husband’s death. And, unless you are satisfied from the evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligence, as aforesaid, and that that negligence caused the death of the plaintiff’s husband, your verdict must be for the defendant.
“4. If you should find from the evidence that the defendant was guilty of the negligence above mentioned, your next inquiry should be, did that negligence cause the death of plaintiff’s husband? And in determining that question is involved also the further question whether or not the plaintiff’s husband was himself guilty of the negligence above mentioned charged against him; and, if yea, did that negligence
“5. Though you may find that the defendant was guilty of negligence, yet you would not in law be justified in finding that that negligence caused the death of the plaintiff’s husband, if you are also satisfied from the evidence that his own negligence cóntributed to that result. In other words, the plaintiff can not recover if her husband’s death was caused partly by the negligence of the defendant and partly by his own negligence.
“6. In determining these questions of negligence, it will be your duty to observe the relation of the parties to each other, and their relative and respective duties as herein defined.
“7. The law does not require of the employer to furnish his employees in such case material that is absolutely safe; but it does require of him to exercise that degree of care to see that the material used is safe that a man of ordinary common sense and prudence engaged in like business would exercise.
“8. In this case, unless you are satisfied from the evidence that the defendant did not exercise the degree of care above mentioned in the providing of the lumber in question, then you can not find that it was guilty of negligence; but if you are satisfied from the evidence that it did not exercise that degree of care in that respect, then you should find that it was guilty of negligence.
“9. Unless you should find from the evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligence, as above defined, your verdict should be for the defendant.
“10. But if you find that the defendant was guilty of negligence, as above mentioned, your next inquiry should be, did that negligence cause the-death of plaintiff’s husband. And in that question is involved the
“11. In considering this last question, you are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s husband knew that the piece of lumber which broke and caused the accident was defective and insufficient for the use to which it was applied, and that he nevertheless put it or caused it to be put into the scaffold, then he was guilty of negligence contributing to his death, and plaintiff can not recover; but, unless the duty of selecting the lumber in question was a duty that properly devolved on him, or was properly assignable to him in the usual course of his employment, he was under no obligation to examine it, and had a right to presume that the material which the defendant furnished him was sufficient for the purpose, and he would not, under those circumstances, be chargeable with negligence in not examining it.
“12. A man offering himself to hire takes upon himself the ordinary risks incident to the employment and guarantees his own fitness for the work, and if an injury occurs to him which is within the ordinary risk of such employment, or from his own unfitness or unskillfulness, he can not recover; but if he should be assigned to a duty by his employer which is not within the usual scope of his employment which requires skill which he does not possess, if he is injured in attempting to discharge that duty through a failure to exercise such skill, it is the negligence of the employer and not his negligence.
“13. If you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s husband was ordered to select the lumber in question, and that the doing so was an act reasonably within the scope of the duties for which he was employed, then it was his duty, in making the selection, to exercise that degree of care that a man of ordi
“14. If, under all the evidence and these instructions, you are satisfied that the plaintiff’s husband was killed through the negligence of the defendant, as above defined, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff, but, unless you are so satisfied, your verdict should be for the defendant.
“15. If you believe from the evidence that the accident which resulted in the plaintiff’s death was an accident incident to the business in which he was employed, and was without negligence of either plaintiff’s husband or the defendant, then the plaintiff can not recover, and your verdict should be for the defendant. ’ ’
The court then, at the request of plaintiff, gave the following instruction:
“The jury are instructed that if you find for the plaintiff, you may, in your verdict, give her such damages, not exceeding five thousand dollars, as you may deem fair and just under the evidence in the case, with reference to the necessary injury resulting to her from the death of her husband.”
The facts disclosed by the evidence are that the deceased was a strong, healthy man, aged forty-three years, who, at the time of his death, had been in the
On the nineteenth of April, 1892, the defendant company were erecting the iron work of a porch or balcony about one hundred and twenty-five feet from the ground around the top of a high tower for the Anheuser Busch Brewing Company. In order to do the work, it became necessary to construct a scaffold at that height for the workmen, outside of five iron brackets inserted in the wall of the tower and extending out about three feet therefrom, upon which to perform their labors. This scaffold was constructed by rigging a hanger at the end of each of the five brackets, and extending two by six inch scantling six feet long from the wall outward, resting about midway and edgewise in the hanger, on which boards were laid, making the required platform outside the brackets, the weight of the boards outside the hanger and brackets holding the scantling in place by pressing the other ends against a beam at the wall under which they rested. Upon this scaffold deceased, John Wells, and John Lakas were at work laying down the last of the boards upon the scantling, when about a quarter to six in the evening, the middle scantling broke, just outside the hanger, and the deceased was thereby precipitated to the ground and instantly killed.
The scantling broke at a place where there was a knot or cross-grain in it, running diagonally through the piece from the top to the bottom, and this was the cause of the breaking.
The deceased, John Lakas, and Henry O’Hara, had been detailed from the defendant’s force of
1. There is but little conflict in the evidence as to the material facts in the case or contention between counsel as to the leading propositions of law that should rule it. The difficulty is in the application.
It is beyond question that the immediate cause of the death of the plaintiff’s husband was the defect in the scantling which broke; that by reason of such defect it was unfit for the purpose for which it was being used; that such unfitness could have been discovered by a reasonable inspection by a competent person before its use; that it was the duty of defendant to furnish its workmen engaged in the dangerous service of erecting this scaffold with timbers fit for the purpose. But as defendant was .not an insurer of the safety of its workmen it was not its duty to furnish timbers absolutely fit and safe for the purpose, but only such as were, apparently so, after a proper inspection by a competent person.
It appears from the evidence that, just before the accident, the foreman and the deceased went out on the scaffold, and when it occurred, were engaged with Lakas in laying down the last boards on the scantling, as they were handed out to them from the roof by O’Hara, who as they went out on the scaffold, went in for that purpose. And it can not be doubted that all three of these workmen were at the time engaged in the service of the defendant, within the scope of their employment, and performing their labor with due care under the immediate directions of the defendant’s foreman, and that the deceased was lawfully on the scaffold and had a right to be there at the time the timber broke.
The answer of the learned judge who tried the case below, to this question, contained in the following extract from his opinion, was that “defendants by their answer not only aver that the plaintiff’s husband selected and prepared the lumber, but, in order to support their conclusion, that his selection and preparation of defective lumber was negligence on his part, it was necessary also for them to aver, as they very properly did aver, that the selection and preparation of the lumber was a duty that devolved on him under the terms of his employment. That is what the answer means, and if it did not in effect say that, it would be defective. The general denial contained in the reply, not only traverses the statement- that Boettger selected and prepared the lumber, but also the statement that it was his duty under the terms of his employment to do so. Under that issue, then, the question clearly arose whether or not he was properly assignable to that duty. If it was a duty that was incident to his employment he was responsible for the manner in which he performed it, and his want of skill would be no excuse; because, as the instructions declared, when he offered himself to hire to do that kind of work he took upon himself the risk incident to it, and guaranteed his fitness ’ for it. But if it was a duty not incident to his employment he wap not responsible, ex contracki, for the manner in which he performed it. He could in such case be guilty of negligence only when it appeared that he failed to exercise the skill that he possessed. •
“One can not be said to be guilty of negligence in contemplation of law, unless he has failed to do that which it was his duty to«have done, or which, under the circumstances, he could be reasonably expected to have done.
“If, as contended for by the learned counsel for the defendant, the only issue tendered by the answer was that Boettger selected the lumber, and the only effect of the reply was a denial of that statement, then the answer .contained no charge of Boettger’s negligence at all, and there was no such issue in the case.
“But the answer does not fall short of a good plea and the reply joins issue on every point. When the court undertakes, as it did in this case, to instruct the jury on the whole case, it would have been error to have omitted to submit any question involved in it. No question can be submitted to the jury which is not involved in the pleadings, but the court should not submit the questions to the jury in the technical language of the pleadings, when they can be put in a form of easier understanding.
“I have given this point very careful study in deference to the earnest contention of the learned counsel, and I am entirely satisfied that the question complained
To this answer of the learned judge we deem it necessary to add but one suggestion, and that is that it was also alleged in the petition that the defect in the timber was known to the defendant or “might by the exercise of ordinary care on its part have been known to it, but could not be discovered with due care and caution by the deceased,” which allegation was traversed by the answer, thus raising directly the question of the competency of the deceased to make the selection, and incidentally of his duty in respect thereto.
We think the issues in the case were properly set out in instructions and correctly presented to the jury therein; except, that in the eleventh paragraph, the jury were told that: “Unless the duty of selecting the lumber in question was a duty that properly devolved upon him or was properly assignable to him in the usual course of his employment he was under no obligation to examine it—and had a right to presume that the material furnished him was sufficient for the purpose and he would not under those circumstances be chargeable with negligence in not examining it.”'
2. The admission of expert testimony to show the effect of a knot or cross-grain upon the strength of a piece of timber such as was in question in this case is assigned for error. The following answer of the trial judge to the defendant’s objection to that testimony is quite satisfactory.
“The strength of the timber and other building material is a subject within the scope of the science of civil enginering. It is also, though to a less accurate degree, within the scope of a mechanic’s skill; and, for the purpose, of this case, a mechanic’s opinion would doubtless have been as reliable as that-of a civil engineer. And there may be many persons who are neither
3. The generality of the instruction upon the measure of damages is also objected to, but as it is evident from the amount of the verdict, that the defendant suffered no injury by reason thereof, the judgment ought not to be reversed on this account. E. S. 1889, sec. 2303; Haehl v. Railroad, 119 Mo. 325; McGowan v. St. Louis Ore & Steel Co., 109 Mo. 518; Browning v. Railroad, ante, p. 55.
If counsel for defendant desired a more definite instruction on the measure of damages they should have asked for it.
Eor the error hereinbefore noted in the instructions the judgment will have to be reversed and the cause remanded for new trial, and it is accordingly so ordered.