144 Mo. App. 132 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
Action by a servant against his master to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been caused by negligence of the master. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff in the sum of one thousand dollars and the cause is before us on the appeal of defendant.
The injury occurred in the morning of July 13, 1908, in the paint room of an agricultural implement factory operated by defendant in Chillicothe. Plaintiff, a common laborer, had been employed in the factory about three months and, at the time of his injury, was engaged with a fellow-servant in the task of taking timbers, recently painted, from the piles where they had been placed to dry, stenciling them a ad then re-piling them in an adjoining room. These timbers, used in the manufacture of hay-stackers, were 18 feet long, 5 1-2 inches wide, 2 1-2 inches thick, and each weighed about 140 pounds. The pile was five feet high and consisted of three stacks set close together, each stack being about twenty inches wide. The timbers were set on edge, there were ten layers, and each layer rested on a thin strip placed crosswise under each end. Plaintiff and his fellow-workman had removed all of the layers of the first stack but the last and were in the act of stooping to pick up a timber from the last layer when the outside timber on the top layer of the second stack toppled off and fell on plaintiff, injuring him.
The foremen of the paint room and another workman had piled these timbers and it appears had used a crosspiece that was too short to extend under the end of the outside timber. To remedy this deficiency, they had put in a short strip called, a “shinney,” but
We think the learned trial judge erred in not granting defendant’s request for a peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict in defendant’s favor.
There is no evidence of a negligent breach- on the part of the master of his duty to exercise reasonable care to furnish his servant a reasonably safe place in which to work. As has been said, a great number of times, the master is not an insurer of the safety of the servant, is not bound to exercise extraordinary care, and is not required to adopt the safest or most approved methods of conducting his business. Within the somewhat wide limits of reasonable care, he may conduct his business in his own way, and the risks of injury from such methods are risks assumed by the servant as a part of the contract of employment. The method employed in the present instance of piling the timbers in layers separated by cross pieces was primitive and simple. To hold that the master should have used braces or standards to hold the timbers in place would be to hold him to the exercise of extraordinary care-. “We have not yet reached that stage in our jurisprudence where the entire care for the safety of the ■servant devolves on the master, and the safety of the servant is not to he entrusted to his own reasonable and independent action.” [Courter v. Mercantile Co., 136 Mo. App. 517.]
The rule applicable to this case is that which governs what might be designated as the “simple tool” ■ cases. Where the servant is provided with an ordinary hammer, ax, chisel or handsaw, common tools with which everyone is familiar, he cannot complain of the ■master and say that he should have been provided with ,.a different kind of tool. So, where sticks of wood are
The judgment is reversed.