96 Mo. App. 173 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
This is a suit for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant, on the ground of alleged negligence:
On the twenty-ninth day of August, 1898, the defendant was engaged, amongst other things, in manufacturing ice at its place of business in Kansas City, Missouri. The building in which the ice was so manufactured was of brick, about seventy-five feet wide from east to west and about ninety-five feet long from north to south; along the center of this building, running north and south, were two large brine tanks in which ice was frozen; each tank was eighty-six feet long and thirty-two feet wide, between which there was a space separating them of about two feet; over each tank, and making a sort of floor, was a skeleton or frame of timbers with rectangular spaces opening down into the brine, through which were placed cans filled with water which was frozen into ice by the action of the brine; these cans were about four feet long and about eighteen inches thick; over each tank was a moving crane which could be operated backward and forward, so that when the water in a can was frpzen the crane was attached and by it the can was lifted out of the brine and carried to a space north of the tank where it was lowered into a vat of hot water to loosen the ice so that it would, when it was lifted out of the water, slip from the can onto .a chute which led to the icehouse. There were two of these hot water vats, one for use in connection with each brine tank; these vats were located in the nine-foot space between the north ends of the tanks and the north wall of the building. The entrance into the building was from the west side near its northwest corner. There were two gangs of men operating the ice plant, one gang for day and the other for night work. The general manager of the plant was William B. Johnson, and the night gang was composed of Joseph Gurry, E. Brunk, O. Klein and E. Tobler. Johnson directed
The evidence of defendant tended to show that the blackboards Roberts had put up for plaintiff to register ‘the condition of the brine had only been put up the day previous to the injury and that plaintiff had never used them prior to said occasion. It was shown that it was the custom of the plaintiff to have these hot water vats covered when not in use, and that at the time he fell into ■one of them they were not in use ancl were uncovered. It was also shown that there was a lack of light in the building, but it was made to appear that had plaintiff held his lantern in a different manner it would have afforded ■sufficient light for him to have seen the uncovered vat. The plaintiff says that when he started from the door where he had been in conversation with Gurry and the other men and followed Klein towards the thermome
Plaintiff seeks to recover on the ground that it was customary with the defendant to cover said vats when not in use; and that on the occasion when he was injured said vats were not in use, and that they were carelesly left open by defendant; and that the room in question, which had previously at all times been well lighted, was negligently left without sufficient light.
The defendant moved the court to dismiss plaintiff’s petition for want of jurisdiction on the ground that in September, 1898, plaintiff had instituted suit' upon the same cause of action in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, which, upon petition of defendant, was removed to the United States Circuit Court for the western division of the western district of Missouri; that on a trial in said last-named court the plaintiff, at the conclusion thereof, took a nonsuit; and that by reason thereof the said court having once obtained jurisdiction, said State court has now no power or jurisdiction over said cause. Said motion, on hearing, was overruled by the court. The defendant revived by its answer the matters and things set up in said motion as a defense; and further answered by a general denial and allegation of contributory negligence. The defendant further moved to stay the proceedings on the ground that the costs taxed against the plaintiff in the former suit should be paid before he ■should be allowed to prosecute this one. This motion was also overruled.
The plaintiff recovered and the defendant appealed.
The defendant’s contentions are:' That the court ■committed error in overruling its said motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction and to stay proceedings; in admitting incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial testimony; in refusing to direct a verdict in favor of defendant at the close of the plaintiff’s case; and in .giving and refusing certain instructions.
On the error assigned of failure of the court to dis
It is admitted that in the matter of staying the proceedings in the case, the court was clothed with a power of exercising a sound discretion. . It is contended that the court in overruling defendant’s motion to stay plaintiff’s case until he had paid the costs of the former suit upon the same cause of action, did not exercise a sound discretion. We think it did. It was shown that on account of his poverty he was allowed to sue as a poor person in the Federal court. Our statute provides that he may also sue in the State courts on account of his-poverty and it would be a contradiction to deny his right to proceed with his case because he had failed to-pay the costs in a case wherein he was allowed to sue as a poor person, and when it was reasonable to suppose, nothing to the contrary appearing, that his financial condition was unchanged.
The error complained of in the admission of testimony over defendant’s objection must be disregarded. The objections were that the proposed evidence was irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial. It has been so often decided by the courts of the State that such objections can not be considered on appeal that we deem, it useless to cite any authorities on the question.
Let us see if, in view of all the facts, the plaintiff’s conduct was such as to preclude him from recovery on the ground of contributory negligence. It was shown without dispute that it was the invariable habit of the defendant to have said vats covered when not in use; that they were not in use at the time of the injury; and that plaintiff did not know that they were uncovered. Such being the case, the plaintiff had the right to rely upon the custom of the defendant to have said vats closed, and his acts are not to be measured by the same rule that defendant seeks to apply to them if the vats had been in use and of necessity properly left uncovered. Plaintiff had been for more than a year in defendant’s employ and up to the time of his injury he had never known the vats to be left open when not in use. When they were in use he was sufficiently warned of the danger, but under defendant’s custom when they were not in use he was assured of safety from that cause. His negligence at most was a question to be left to the jury, which was done by appropriate instruction.
It is, however, claimed that if there was any negligence shown on the part of defendant’s employees, it was the failure to cover the vat, which was the failure of his fellow-servants and not that of the defendant. It was shown that the means for covering the vats were on hand such as had been used on all former occasions. It was therefore a question whether the duty devolved on the master or the servants to have said vats covered. But were the laborers whose business it was to assist in the manufacture of ice, fellow-servants of the plaintiff whose business it was to keep watch over defendant’s property at night and incidentally to register the condition of the brine used to manufacture ice? He had nothing whatever to do in common with the other laborers. His registering on the blackboard the temperature of the brine was not for the guidance of those engaged in the manufacture of ice, for they did their own registering, but it was in the nature of a report to Mr. Roberts, defendant’s general manager. The question of what it takes to constitute a fellow-servant and a vice-principal was learnedly discussed by Judge Marshall in Grattis v. Railway, 153 Mo. 380, wherein he reviewed all the decisions of the Supreme Court of the State on the subject. We gather that it was there held that a vice-principal is a person who has the right to speak for the master, and that this is always a mixed question of law and fact. The mere fact that the plaintiff was engaged in a different department of the defendant’s business from that of Gurry and his co-workmen, did not, under the rule in the Grattis case, supra, prevent him from being a fellow-servant.
We believe, however, under the facts, that Gurry was the defendant’s vice-principal. There was evidence that a Mr. Johnson was foreman of the ice plant and had charge of the men during the day, and that Joseph Gurry had charge of the business at night. According to one witness, “he told them whatever work
While plaintiff’s instructions numbers one and two are faulty in that they include the duty of the defendant to furnish ’and maintain reasonably safe appliances and premises, when there was no such issue before the •jury, yet as the case turned upon the question of defendant’s negligence in leaving the vats uncovered and the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, the jury could not have been misled thereby. The defendant asked sixteen instructions, nine of which were given, the fifteenth and sixteenth being modified and then given. The modification of the former was unimportant and that of the sixteenth made it all the stronger for defendant.
The plaintiff filed two motions in the case: one to dismiss the appeal, and the other to affirm the judgment of the lower court on the ground that defendant had not complied with the rules of the court in filing a proper abstract. These motions are overruled for the reason that the appellant has substantially complied with said rules.
There are some other questions raised by defendant as to the correctness of the rulings of the trial court, but they seem to us immaterial.
We think that the case in the main was well tried and that the judgment was for the right party; therefore, the same is affirmed.