This is аn action for damages sustained by plaintiff from falling into a pit in the plant of defendant, appellant. It is álleged that there was an open pit in the room in which plaintiff was at work, that this pit was not surrounded by railings or other safeguards for the protection of employees, whose duty it was to work near it, the specific negligence and carelessness charged being failure to inclose the pit or otherwise safeguard it, and so failing to provide plaintiff, an employee of defendant, with a reasonably safe place in which to work. Damages are claimed in the sum of $7500 for injuries sustained, which consisted of fracture of plaintiff’s left arm just below the shoulder.
The answer is a genеral denial with a plea of contributory negligence, the contributory negligence
The trial was before the court and to a jury. A verdict of $1200 having been returned in favor of plaintiff, judgment following, defendant, filing its motion for a new trial and saving exception to that being overruled, duly perfected appeal to this court.
Plaintiff’s account of the accident, and he was the only witness to it, %as that while in the employ of defendant as a night watchman and acting under the direction of the engineer in сharge of the plant, which was an ice manufacturing plant, he went through the tank room of the plant, intending to go to the ice room and get out some manufactured ice. In one corner of this tank room was a pump oрerated by steam. When steam was turned on, as was the case at the time of this accident, it was the duty of plaintiff to see that the pump operated. All that he had to do to put it in operation was to pull a little lever attached to it, if the pump was out of order or had stopped, whereupon the pump would start up and keep running as long as the pressure of steam was on. Alongside of this tank room in which the pump was located was an оpen pit five feet deep and four or five feet wide, unprovided with any railing or guard of any kind. The pump was set on the floor of the tank room about eight inches from the pit.
On the night of the accident plaintiff, according to his testimony, was in the ice room, which is on the other side of this pit from the tank room, dealing out ice to customers. While he was in this ice room and not hearing the pump “knocking,” he concluded it had stopped. Going out to examine it аnd walking along the floor of the tank room and along the side of the pit, he saw that the pump had stopped. He took
Plaintiff testified as to his injuries, which consisted, as before stated, of a broken arm; that he was fifty-six years old; that he was earning two dollars a day at the time of his injury and had been employed by defendant off and on for six years; that since his injury he had not been able to do any work at all except for two days; had worked a little but had to quit as he could not stand it. This is practically all of his testimony.
Defendant, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and again at thе' close of all the testimony, interposed demurrers which were refused, defendant excepting.
At the request of plaintiff the court instructed the jury, among other things, that if they found that the pump in question was located within a short distance of the pit and that the proximity of the pit to the pump exposed anj^one engaged in starting or stopping the pump to the danger of falling into the pit unless it was guarded by a rail or some other device that would obviate the danger of falling into it, and if the jury believed from the evidence that defendant knew or by
The court further told the jury that while an employee, in accepting employment, assumes the ordinary risks incident to it, he does not assume those occasioned by the negligence of the employer, and while plaintiff in the present case assumed the ordinary risks incident to the work he was called upon to perform, he did not assume those, if any, arising from the negligence of defendant.
The court further instructed as to the measure of damages and what constitutеd ordinary care.
No error is assigned here to the giving of these instructions, save that it is claimed by the appellant that the case should not have gone to the jury at all and that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustаined; on this the sole assignment of error is founded. In support of this it is claimed that the evidence taken as a whole entirely fails to establish any negligence whatever on the part of the employer, plaintiff with full knowledge of the conditions having assumed the risk. It is further argued that the unguarded condition of the pit was not the proximate
We are unable to accede to these arguments. In an old case, Bassett v. City of St. Joseph,
In Warner v. St. Louis & Meramec River R. R. Co.,
Appljdng the rule in the Bassett case to the facts before the court in Graefe v. St. Louis Transit Co.,
The last reference to the Bassett case which we have found is in Obermeyer v. Logeman Chair Co.,
Applyíngrthel'áw as announced in these cases to the* facts1 lib 'the 'cash at bar, it may be said with absolute certainty that''the' sudden jerk which threw re-Siietídent^óff'ó'f'his balance'’could not possibly have reunited'ití‘any iAjur'y'tó'him, so far as the evidence here ' shоws',' uhlfesé as the result of that he had fallen into thiéu|)it!/‘'dfi l'tbe'pit had bddn reasonably protected and ^fdá’son'ably'-guarded'tó have prevented those haying oc-'’cksíoíi toí:wórk'in its vicinity from falling into it, it 'iáfTleártthat ‘jóMütifírwould not have been hurt.
í ti u: i v.lt ig" to1 b'e noted that‘there is no charge here made '-tkat*plaintiff"had' handled the lever, the jerk of which * threw5 hini1 baókward, 'negligently. The contributory 'tíé'glig'etíee charged' is going into the room without his lantern being lighted. His evidence is positive that he ■ had Ms*lighted lantern with him; that but for the light ■ óf Ais-láníertíythe place was dark, the engineer hav-lngífrenlóted',thé electric lamps from the tank room, ■'There-is tío - serious' contradiction of this.
uc// !Thfe;'jury':Were ‘properly instructed in this case '<áííd,"a'síifetíi,árkedi,:-no'co'faplaint whatever is made of •'ttíé ifiSfruHtiOns, provided any instruction should have '’been* giVOnyWe hold1 that this was peculiarly a case "fdr thé jutíj/,>!atíd'rté‘ seé!no occasion to disturb its ver--dictb 'i,r: ■' ..
-The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
