195 Mo. App. 201 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1917
The plaintiff recovered a judgment for $5000 for the loss of an eye alleged to he due to the negligence of the defendants. The charge of negligence in the petition is as follows: “The defendants by and through their section foreman, carelessly and negligently failed to provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place in which to work, and said section foreman carelessly, negligently and awkwardly attempted to drive a railroad spike into an unsteady fence post in close proximity to the plaintiff, resulting in the spike flying from the fence post and striking the plaintiff in the right eye.”
This is all the evidence in the record before us bearing on any question of negligence.
At the close of all the evidence the court refused a peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence requested by defendants.
Plaintiff submitted the case on the following instructions :
“A. The court instructs the jury that if you find the issues in this cause for the plaintiff, you should assess his damages at such sum as you may believe, from all the evidence, will be a fair compensation for any pain of body or mind, and for any permanent injuries or disfigurement (if any, or either, or all such) which you may believe from the evidence the plaintiff has sustained, or will hereafter sustain, by reason of his said injuries, if any, and which you may believe from the evidence to have been caused by the railroad spike striking him, if you believe he was so struck ,• in all not to exceed ten thousand dollars.”
“B. The term ‘negligence,’ as used in these instructions, means want of ordinary care, and the term ‘ordinary care’ means such care as a person of ordinary pru
To the giving of these instructions the defendants excepted.
At the request of defendants the court gave an instruction on contributory negligence, one on assumption of risk, and the following:
“4. Ton are further instructed that the mere fact that plaintiff was struck and injured by the spike which flew from the post as the section foreman was attempting to drive it into said post does not make the defendants liable for plaintiff’s injury; but before plaintiff can recover in this case he must prove to your satisfaction, by the preponderance of the testimony, that his said injury was directly caused by the act of defendants’ section foreman in attempting to drive said spike into the fence post, and that such act of said foreman was negligent, and if he has not done so your verdict must be for the defendants.”
Appellants contend that plaintiff’s instruction A was misleading and constituted error; that the petition failed to state a cause of action; that the court erred in admitting testimony concerning the kind of hammer used and with reference to a glancing lick; and finally that under the evidence the plaintiff was injured as the result of a risk incident to the business and one assumed by him.
We think the objection to instruction A under the facts of this case is well taken, and that the jury as appellants contend in the absence of any instruction defining the issues and acts of negligence on which they could find for the plaintiff might well infer from that instruction that they were to assess damage in plaintiff’s favor if thov found that the spike which was driven lw the foreman struck plaintiff in the eye and injured him. There was no denial that the spike struck the plaintiff in the eye. The jury in that instruction were not even required to find that the injury was occasioned by negligence. And we are unable to see why plaintiff asked instruction B defining “ ‘negligence’ as used in these in
The question as to the sufficiency of the allegations of the petition, the admission of the testimony quoted and objected to as to the hammer and the glancing lick, and the vice of instruction A, all go to the same proposition and that is that the act complained of here and the act shown is not an act of negligence which itself speaks. The striking of the spike with the wrong kind of tool or the striking of it by a glancing lick are not matters peculiarly within the knowledge of the master and under his control; the plaintiff was in as good a position to know, to plead, and to have a finding on the specific acts of negligence by which the evidence shows he was injured as was the defendants; it is not a case where the res ipsa loquitur doctrine applies. [Klebe v. Parker Distilling Co., 207 Mo. 480, 105 S. W. 1057.] It is not a case wherein the act of negligence is similar to that charged in Stewart v. Mason, — Mo. App. — , 186 S. W. 578, or that charged in Compton v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., — Mo. App. — , 182 S. W. 1055. The charge in this petition is similar to that condemned after verdict in the following cases: Waldhier v. Hannibal & St. J. R. Co., 71 Mo. 514; Edens v. Hannibal & St. J. R. Co., 72 Mo. 212; Current v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 86 Mo. 62; Gurley v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 93 Mo. 445, 6 S. W. 218; Young v. Schofield, 132 Mo. 650, 661, 662, 34 S. W. 497; Leet v. Bank of St. Louis, 141 Mo. l. c. 581, 42 S. W. 1074. See, also, Castle v. Wilson, — Mo. App. — , 183 S. W. 1106, where the judgment was reversed because the petition did not charge negligence under the humanitarian rule although the, evidence tended to show liability under that charge.
The act of negligence in this ease, if any, as shown by the evidence, was in the use of an improper tool, or in the improper use of the tool, or in not giving plaintiff time to move hmself to a place of safety when the section foreman knew or ought to have known of plaintiff’s danger. The place which the master furnished was entirely safe in the absence of these specific acts. And as
"We fail to agree with the appellants that the case which the evidence tends to make out is one in which the plaintiff assumed the risk of the injury he sustained. If he was called by the foreman to a place for the purpose of examining the post and spike and giving his advice and the foreman negligently struck the spike before a reasonably prudent man would have struck it considering plaintiff’s proximity to him, or if the foreman called plaintiff for the purpose of advice and struck the spike with an improper tool, or carelessly struck it a glancing lick, the plaintiff would in our judgment be entitled to a recovery for the consequences of these acts of negligence.