159 Mo. App. 568 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
Plaintiff, a brewer employed at a brewery operated by defendant in Kansas City, was injured while engaged in loading keg beer into a car and alleges that his injuries were caused by the negligence of defendant in failing'to provide him a reasonably safe place in which to work. The answer contains a general denial and pleas of assumed risk and contributory negligence. At the close of the evidence the court refused the request of defendant for a peremptory instruction and submitted issues of fact to the jury. A verdict was returned for plaintiff but afterwards defendant’s motion for a new trial was' sustained on the ground “that the court erred in not sustaining the said demurrer to the evidence . . . and in not finding the plaintiff to be injured by a fellow-servant. ” Plaintiff appealed.
Material facts disclosed by the evidence may be stated as follows: Plaintiff had been employed as a brewer by defendant for more than a year preceding the injury* and, frequently had been required to assist in loading beer in railroad cars for shipment. Quite often keg beer and bottled beer were loaded in the same car to make a load and that is what was being done in the present case. There is evidence tending to show that the brewing and bottling departments were under separate foremen and that the brewers and bottlers belonged to separate labor unions and worked under different contracts of employment made with defendant in their behalf by their respective unions. A shipping clerk, however, attended to supervising the loading of cars where, as here, the load was to be partly of keg and partly of bottled beer, the clerk selected men from the two departments to do the loading and we are accurate in saying that cars, were loaded under the direction and supervision of a single
The rule invoked by plaintiff that “they are co-servants who are so related and associated in their work that they can observe and have an influence over each other’s conduct and report delinquencies to a common correcting power and they are not co-servants who are engaged in different and distinct departments of work,” (Relyea v. Railway, 112 Mo. 86; Koerner v. Car Co., 209 Mo. 141) may be conceded but in the view we entertain of the facts of the case, it does not aid the position of plaintiff. There was but one foreman in charge of the work of loading cars. All of the servants engaged in that work under his control and supervision were fellow servants, regardless of whether or not they were drawn from different departments of the brewery. In the work of loading they could observe each other and have an influence over each other’s work, and they had a common vice-principal to whom any of them might complain of the delinquencies of his co-workers.
But if it could be said that we entertain an incorrect view of the duties of the shipping clerk and that he had no right to supervise or control the work of loading the car, still, we think the demurrer to the evidence would have to be sustained on the ground that the proof will not sustain a reasonable conclu
It follows that the court did not err in granting a- new trial and the judgment is affirmed.