143 Mo. App. 422 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
Plaintiff’s husband was killed, in the State of Kansas, while engaged in the service of defendant Elevator Company in its elevator in that State. She charged his death to defendant’s negligence and brought this action to recover damages. She had judgment in the trial court for six thousand dollars. Originally there were joined with this defendant, the Santa Fe Grain Company and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company, but the action was dismissed as to them.
No one saw how deceased was killed but his death occurred on the second floor of the elevator. On this floor there was a large belt operated from the second floor into an annex on the north, with a floor about five feet higher than the main one. The distance was one
There was more than one cause of negligence charged, but the case was submitted to the jury, at plaintiff’s instance, on the ground that defendant was negligent in not having a handrail on the runway and that in consequence thereof the deceased, while on the runway in discharge of his duty in going to or returning from the grain spout, fell onto the belt. The petition charged that while upon the runway and in reaching across and over the belt to pull the slide in the grain spout, he was caught therein and drawn between the
Founded upon the rule which requires that he who affirms an actionable cause against another, must show with a reasonable degree of certainty that such cause exists, is the statement of law that if an injury has resulted to a person from one of several causes, for some of which the party charged would be liable and for others not, the party making the charge must show with reasonable certainty that the cause for which the party accused is liable, produced the result. [Warner v. Ry. Co., 178 Mo. 125; Trigg v. Ozark Land & Lumber Co., 187 Mo. 227; McGrath v. Transit Co., 197 Mo. 97; Smart v. Kansas City, 91 Mo. App. 586.] Otherwise, the finding of a producing cause is left to conjecture, and that is never allowable.
To uphold the judgment in this case we must find that the plaintiff has produced tangible and substantial evidence that the deceased slipped on the runway or running board while walking along it, or while engaged with the slide at the grain spout, and fell onto the belt whereby he was conveyed to the pulley and mangled to his death by being rolled between it and the belt and by being whirled and beat against near-by timbers; and that the absence of a handrail caused him to fall. To write down in full the course of reasoning indulged in by plaintiff to show that deceased’s death was caused in that one way, on account of the absence of a handrail, would occupy much space and serve no purpose. We have gone over the record, assisted by counsel, who have left no point in plaintiff’s behalf untouched, and find no case was made, for the jury. In our opinion defendant has suggested more than one theory of how the death was caused, which is more entitled to belief than that attempted to be shown by plaintiff. Indeed we cannot understand how, within any reasonable de
The foregoing makes it unnecessary to consider the point made that the defect and its danger was better known to deceased than to defendant and that it was a risk assumed by him. The judgment is reversed.