Courter v. Tootle

136 Mo. App. 517 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909

BROADDUS, P. J.

This is a suit against defendant, a corporation engaged in the wholesale dry goods business, for damages alleged to have been the result of defendant’s negligence.

On or about the 20th day of April, 1906, the plaintiff was engaged with three other employees in unloading from a car crates of linoleum and storing them in defendant’s warehouse. These crates were twelve feet long, fourteen inches in diameter and weighed from five hundred and fifty to seven hundred pounds. They were constructed by using two pine boards, each fourteen inches square, one at each end of a roll of linoleum. The ends of two boards, each fourteen inches square, were nailed to the opposite edges of these boards. The roll of linoleum was then placed between these boards and, to secure them in place, short pieces of pine about six inches wide, six or eight in number, were nailed at intervals across the open sides. In the language of the description given in the briefs, “the structure looked like a com*519mon tree box, closed at the ends, within a roll of linoleum inside instead of a tree.” The dimensions of the warehouse were eighty by one hundred feet; and, according to the evidence, the warehouse was imperfectly lighted.

The crates were stored in piles four feet high. On the occasion in question, the plaintiff with the other employees was engaged in piling crates of the description named upon a pile that had been made sometime previously. The crates were carried to the place desired upon a truck. The manner of depositing them was for two men to place a flat iron bar about three feet long under one end of the crate and by this means to lift that end up to a level with the top of the pile, and put one end of the iron bar on the top of the pile; and then the man at the other end of the bar would hold on to it and support that end of the crate. The man that had raised'the inside end of the iron bar to the top of the pile would then go to the other end. of the crate and help the two there to raise it, and then all hands would roll it on the pile. While the plaintiff was lifting the end of the bar next to the pile of crates, he was struck near the hip bone by one of the cleats in the pile, which had become loosened and protruded outward, and was injured. It was shown that these cleats frequently became detached while the crates were being handled, and the employees were instructed by defendant’s superintendant that when they saw one that was loose to nail it back and, if that could not be done satisfactorily, to take it off. And it was shown that both the employees and the superintendent at times nailed these cleats when they observed that they were loose or took them off when they deemed that proper. And that it was a thing which frequently happened and the matter would be remedied by any one of them when it came under his notice. Such was the usual course pursued in the handling of these crates and with which plaintiff was familiar.

*520The plaintiff recovered judgment and defendant appealed. Several questions are raised on the appeal, but we will confine our discussion to the one that we think is decisive of the case. The defendant by proper, instruction raised the question of the right of plaintiff to recover on the pleadings and evidence. The court entertained the opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to recover on the showing he had made and overruled defendant’s demurrer.

It is elementary law in cases of negligence arising between employee and employer, that plaintiff must, as a condition precedent to his right to recover, show that defendant failed in the performfince of some duty owing him as his employer. [Glasscock v. Dry Goods Co., 106 Mo. App. 657; Ryan v. McCully, 123 Mo. 636; Gurley v. Railway, 104 Mo. l. c. 223.] We are of the opinion that plaintiff failed to show that defendant was derelict in the performance of any duty, whose non-performance would authorize a recovery. It appears from the plaintiff’s own evidence that it was as much the duty of employees as that of defendant to guard against injury to be anticipated from the cleats that might become detached from the crates. These loosened cleats could not be seriously regarded as a menace to the safety of the defendant’s employees. There are many ways in which a person may be injured from causes wholly unexpected and therefore not to be anticipated, for which the law affords no compensation. If it were otherwise, the undertaking of an employer would be that of an -insurer for the safety of his servant. And we have not yet reached that stage in o-ur jurisprudence where the entire care for the safety of the servant devolves on the master, and the safety o'f the servant is not to be entrusted to his own reasonable and independent action.

It is the duty of a servant, which he owes to himself as well as to his master, to- use reasonable care to avoid danger to be apprehended from defects and conditions which are as open to observation to the one as to *521the other and which he can, by the use of ordinary care, avoid or remedy as well as can his master. [Beckman v. Brewing Ass’n, 98 Mo. App. 555; Glasscock v. Dry Goods Co., 106 Mo. App. 657.]

The manner of doing the work was ordinarily a reasonably safe one, which the defendant had the right to pursue, and the risks of danger attending it were assumed by plaintiff by reason of his employment.

It was not shown that the want of sufficient light in the warehouse had any causal connection with the plaintiff’s injury.

Reversed.

All concur.
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