213 Mo. 320 | Mo. | 1908
Plaintiff instituted this suit in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis to recover the sum of $5,000 damages for the killing of her husband, John M. Bradley, through the alleged negligence of the defendant. There was a trial before the court and a jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff duly appealed. The facts are few, and are substantially as follows:
Bradley was an experienced coffee man, and was perfectly familiar with the manner in which the coffee was piled. For three years he had assisted in building and tearing down those piles. Frequently when one pile was removed the one next to it would settle more or less and bulge out in the center. If the bulge was so great as to endanger the pile falling, Bradley and some other employees of the company would adjust the matter, but if the bulge was only slight no attention was paid to it. A few days prior to the accident the deceased was summoned to serve on the jury in the circuit court, and while he was in attendance upon the court other employees of the company performed his duties. The day prior to his return the foreman in charge of the business and another employee of the company partially removed one of the center rows of coffee, which caused one of the adjoining rows to bulge or lean somewhat, but not sufficient
I. At the close of plaintiff’s case, the defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was by the court refused, and to which action of the court in refusing to give said instruction defendant duly excepted. The defendant declined to introduce any evidence, and the court submitted the issues to the jury under certain instructions given, and, as elsewhere stated, the jury found for the defendant, and plaintiff duly appealed.
The contention of learned counsel for plaintiff convicts the trial court of having committed many errors during the progress of the trial, and asks this court to review the rulings of the trial court.
In response to that request we are confronted with the assertion of counsel for defendant that the judgment is for the right party regardless of the errors assigned; and contend that the evidence as disclosed by the record does not make out a ease for the plaintiff, and that the court erred in not sustaining its demurrer to the evidence, and renews that contention in this court.
We will first consider defendant’s demurrer to the evidence, and if we find that the evidence was not sufficient to make out a prima-facie case for plaintiff, and that the demurrer should have been sustained, then the necessity of making an examination and passing
It is the contention of the defendant that Bradley came to his death as the result of a risk which was assumed by him and which arose in the course of his employment. In other words, it is contended that he was killed, not because the master furnished him an unsafe place in which to labor, as contended for by the appellant, but that the danger in this case was created and arose solely out of the fact that the servants of defendant were removing the sacks of coffee from one pile, which had a tendency to make the adjacent piles lean and bulge out of a perpendicular line. Some of the sacks had been removed by employees Burgin and Burchard the day before the accident, and on the morning of the accident deceased was removing additional sacks from the pile himself, and it was not until he had removed several of them that the adjacent pile fell upon and crushed him.
The law seems to be well settled in this State and elsewhere in this class of cases that if the place which the master furnishes to the servant in which to labor is reasonably safe for that purposé, then the master has performed his full duty toward the servant, and he is not liable for injuries to the servant caused by dangers created by the servant in the performance of his duties. The reason for that rule is that the master can foresee and remedy the dangers which are connected with the place in which the servant is to labor, but not so in reference to dangers which are created or caused by the servant and which arise out of the performance of his duties. In most if not in all cases of that character such dangers depend upon the care and skill of the servant himself.
For instance, the most hazardous of employments may be performed with a minimum degree of danger by a most skillful and careful operator; while, upon the
In Livengood v. Lead & Zinc Co., 179 Mo. 229, the plaintiff was injured while assisting a drill-man in drilling holes in a mine drift by the explosion of a charge of powder in a hole which had on the day previous to plaintiff’s employment been placed in the ■drift by the drill-man. It was the custom of the drill-man and his helper to examine every shot and ascertain whether or not they had exploded, and, if it was discovered that any shot had not exploded, it was their custom to work somewhere else. The plaintiff at the time was acting as helper to the drill-man. The court in this connection says: “The duties of a drill-man and his helper are necessarily-more or less dangerous, but they are simple, and require no great amount of skill or training. Any man of ordinary intelligence can perform them. They consist of drilling holes in the rock, putting sticks of dynamite in them, setting off the shots, removing the dirt after the explosion, and then going through the same operation again. It is not a scientific matter to ascertain whether any of the charges in any of the holes remain unexploded after the shots have been fired. Even the slightest examination will disclose that fact to even the most unscientific investigator. There is no reason in law why the ascertainment of this simple fact cannot be as well and as safely performed by the servant as the drilling of the hole and the charging of it with dynamite can be performed by the servant. In fact, the latter requires more care and skill than the former. And there is no claim in this case that the master was negligent
The Livengood case was followed in the case of Knorpp v. Wagner, 195 Mo. 637. There the court said: “Another thing, it is fundamental that a master can not delegate his primal duties as master by a general order or rule and thus avoid responsibility. If the courts would tolerate such ready-at-hand scheme of easy avoidance, then the employer of men might well add a new and worldly significance to the lines of the good old hymn:
This is the way I long have sought;
And mourned because I found it not;
In Henson v. Armour Packing Co., 113 Mo. App. 618, a carpenter was sent to reinforce the shoring of a bank of earth and while engaged in the work the bank •caved in and injured him. There the court held that the master was not liable merely because the place was unsafe or merely because the plaintiff’s foreman sent him into a dangerous place, and this because the very work he was sent to do was to render a dangerous place reasonably safe. The court says in this connection: “When the work in hand is dangerous for the reason that it is to secure and make safe an unsafe place, the rule, as generally applied, that the master must furnish the servant a safe place in which to work, can have no application. To say that a man can have a safe place to work in an unsafe place is an absurdity.”
In the case of Kelley v. Railroad, 105 Mo. App. 365, the plaintiff was injured by a defective appliance. The duty, however, was imposed upon him of looking out for defects in such appliance and reporting same. There the court says: “When it is the servant’s office to keep tools in repair, and he carelessly fails to do so, the rule that the master must use care to furnish the servant' reasonably safe tools has no bearing on-the case, for the reason that the servant’s own dereliction prevented the discharge of the master’s duty.”
If we view the case at bar in the light of what has been held in the foregoing cases, and apply the legal
He was hourly in contact with the situation, caused and observed the condition of the sacks, while the master had no occasion or opportunity to inspect them. If the rows bulged, it was caused by the act of the servant, and it was his duty to inspect and straighten them without waiting for orders from the master; and there is no legal reason suggested why that simple duty might not have been as well and as safely performed by the servant as by his master. In fact, the former’s knowledge of the situation was better than that of the latter, and for that reason it would have been a useless and idle ceremony for the servant to have reported that fact to the master and awaited orders from the latter to remedy the defect. And it should be.borne in mind that there is no claim advanced
It was the duty of Bradley and his assistant to keep a constant lookout to see whether or not the piles of coffee would bulge or lean when sacks were removed from the adjoining piles, and, if so, to straighten them up', and thereby prevent them from falling and thereby injuring themselves. In this instance they failed to do so, but proceeded with their work, and the injury resulted. Both were negligent, and the injury was caused by a risk incident to and ordinarily connected with the performance of the duties they were engaged in. While the work was somewhat dangerous, yet it was not illegal for the master to engage the appellant to perform it. It is not contended that the master did not have the right to conduct his business in the manner shown by the evidence; but concede such has been made, still he would have had the right to conduct it in his own way so long as that way was -not unlawful or was not a negligent mode of conducting it; and in this case there is no evidence tending to show the mode in which the business was conducted was either negligent or unlawful. Bradley assumed the risk that was incident to the mode in which it was being conducted, and he also assumed the risk of being injured by the negligence of his fellow-servant.
Suppose, for instance, instead of being employed in a house in building up and tearing down rows of coffee, as in the case at bar, Bradley had been employed
Counsel for appellant places some stress upon the fact that her husband had not been working for respondent for a few days prior to his injury, and that he did not remove or assist in removing the sacks which caused the pile of coffee to lean and fall. That is true, but it is also true the pile was still standing when he began work, and he knew that when the sacks were so removed it was liable to cause the adjoining piles to lean, and with that knowledge, when he saw the sacks had been removed, ordinary care and prudence on his part would have caused him to have looked and observed the leaning condition of the pile in question, which was as obvious to him as to the master; and had be done so, he would have seen the leaning condition thereof, and could have conducted himself accordingly. But having gone into the dangerous place without having done so, he was guilty of negligence which caused his injuries and death, and which will preclude his widow from a recovery in this case.
This precise question was made and presented to this court, in the case of Livengood, supra, and it was there held, as here, that plaintiff could not recover.
We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that the
This view of the case renders it unnecessary for us to pass upon the several questions so ably discussed in brief and in oral argument by learned counsel for appellant.
The judgment is affirmed.