173 S.W.2d 745 | Mo. | 1943
Lead Opinion
To recover for injuries sustained when he fell in a mill at Pleasant Hill, Missouri, William Giles instituted this action against the Moundridge Milling Company and its manager, Ernestine J. Keltner. At the close of all the evidence the trial court indicated its intention of giving Miss Keltner's peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and Giles took an involuntary nonsuit as to her. Nine of the jury found against Giles and in favor of the milling company. He filed a motion for a new trial as to the Moundridge Milling Company and a motion to set aside the involuntary nonsuit as to Miss Keltner. The trial court sustained both these motions and the milling company and its manager, Miss Keltner, appeal.
In his motion for a new trial as to the milling company Giles set forth twelve grounds or reasons for the motion and the record recites that the motion "was by the court sustained for all reasons set forth therein." The appellant milling company assigns this ruling as error and contends that the effect of the court's ruling was to sustain the plaintiff's motion for a new trial without assigning any specific reason or reasons therefor and that in so doing the court violated the statute requiring the court's order to "specify of record the ground or grounds on which said new trial is granted." Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 1169; King v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co.,
[1, 2] In this instance there is a strong probability that the court's order sustaining the motion for "all reasons set forth therein" is not within the intended spirit of the statute and ruling of the King case because at least six of the assigned grounds are without merit and even without point [747] and no effort is made to justify those reasons here. Yet it cannot be denied that the order is a technical and literal compliance with the statute which only requires the court's order to "specify of record the ground or grounds on which said new trial is granted." Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 1169; King v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co.,
The appellant, Moundridge Milling Company, contends that in any event a verdict should have been directed in its favor because there was no proof of any negligence on its part for which the respondent was entitled to recover.
Miss Keltner, as manager of the Moundridge Milling Company, agreed to buy the "good" grain sacks from Giles' and Arvin's collection. She told them to unload the sacks in front of the elevator and one of the men would check them. From the entrance nearest the scales and through the mill past the elevator there is a "runway." The "runway" is a strip or section of tongue and grooved pine flooring laid across the floor of the mill. It is five or [748] six feet wide and the thickness of the boards higher than the level of the mill floor which the witnesses say is from an inch to two inches. There was a space estimated at from three to five inches wide between the runway and the elevator shaft. The elevator shaft was not enclosed but there were uprights at each corner of the shaft and across the front of the elevator shaft there was a wooden bar which laid in slots in the upright posts. *573
The sacks were carried in and placed on the runway in front of the elevator. At that time the elevator itself was on that floor of the mill but was from an inch to two inches below the level of the floor. Arvin carried in the first sacks and stood watching as the assistant manager counted and graded them. Giles carried in other of the sacks and as he was watching the sorting of the sacks got off balance, as he stood between the sacks and the elevator, and fell, landing on the elevator and fracturing his left hip.
[3] The basis of the appellant's argument that a verdict should have been directed for it is that there was no proof of any negligence because the plaintiff admitted that he saw the floor and its condition before he fell and, therefore, there was no duty upon the milling company to warn him or to do anything else to prevent his falling because the evidence shows without contradiction that he fell by reason of a condition which was open, obvious and apparent to him. Murray v. D'Oench Co.,
What the appellant says would be true if the factors pointed out and stressed by it were the only circumstances involved. For example, both Giles and Arvin testified that there was grain on the floor — that the runway was higher than the level of the floor and that as Giles shifted his position one of his feet got over the edge of the runway, he got off balance and fell. Both Giles and Arvin could and did see the floor and the runway. And, as the trial court said: ". . . there isn't any use of wasting time on the question of whether grain caused him to fall down. He says he didn't look at the floor, that he could have but he didn't, which would take that question out of the case." These are the circumstances stressed by the appellant and, as we have indicated, if they were the only circumstances relied upon as creating liability its position might be well taken as the respondent's case might then fall within the ruling of the above cases because the owner or proprietor is not an insurer of his business invitee's safety (Main v. Lehman,
[4] In this case the respondent relied upon a further circumstance which he claims demonstrates a dangerous condition known to or *574 discoverable by the possessor of land and unknown to and undiscoverable by him as a business visitor which caused his injuries and that, therefore, liability follows. 2 Restatement, Torts, Sec. 343; Annotations 118 A.L.R. 425; 100 A.L.R. 710; 58 A.L.R. 136; 46 A.L.R. 1111; 43 A.L.R. 866; 33 A.L.R. 181. The respondent's evidence showed the circumstances the appellant points out but in addition he plead and his main instruction covered the additional factor of the proximity of the elevator, its uprights and the wooden bar across the front of the elevator in the slots of the uprights. As to those he plead "that the posts supporting said bar at said entrance to said elevator . . . were loose and the said bar was worn and rounded at its ends so that the said bar was likely to fall on slight pressure; that . . . there was danger and unreasonable risk of injury to the defendants' invitees who might be using said runway or might be standing thereon or thereabouts . . . in that said bar was likely to fall on slight pressure should such an invitee try to catch or protect himself therewith from getting off balance . . ." He plead the circumstances of his presence and said that "he got off balance and in trying to protect himself from so getting off balance he reached for said bar which by reason of said dangerous conditions and the negligence [749] of defendants gave way causing plaintiff to fall in said shaft upon said elevator . . ." He plead and required the jury to find the defendants guilty of the following specific acts of negligence: "That the defendants negligently failed to provide and maintain a reasonably sufficient bar or guard at the said entrance to said elevator; that the defendants negligently caused and permitted the posts supporting said bar at said entrance to be and remain loose and wobbly and the said bar to be worn and rounded at its ends so that said bar was likely to fall on slight pressure; that though the defendants knew or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known of said dangerous conditions . . . and that plaintiff did not know of its dangers" they were permitted to exist and caused the respondent's fall and injuries.
The evidence shows the bar and upright posts to be in the condition described by the petition and the appellants do not deny that fact but argue that the evidence shows that the respondent "fell by reason of his foot getting over the edge of the runway which was an inch above the floor and that he then lost his balance and fell against or on the bar" and that, therefore, the bar, the posts and their condition were not the proximate cause of his fall. They reason that because of the inch or two inches difference in the floor and the runway that the case is within the ruling of the slight step down in the theatre in Peck v. Yale Amusement Co. (Mo.), 195 S.W. 1033, or the painted steps in Vogt v. Wurmb, supra. They say, assuming there was negligence with respect to the condition of the bar, yet *575
even if there had been no negligence as to it "would the injury to the plaintiff have been prevented? The answer is no. The reason for this answer is that neither the presence nor the condition of the bar had anything to do with causing the plaintiff to fall." They say he was caused to fall by a condition which was not negligence to start with but which was open and admittedly apparent to him. In short, their argument, of necessity, is that the bar was not the proximate cause of the respondent's fall and that the case is, therefore, controlled by Boyd v. Logan Jones Dry Goods Co.,
Exactly the same situation is not present in the instant case. Arvin said that after he carried in the first sacks and while Giles was outside he placed his hand on the bar and it fell. As he replaced the bar to its former position the assistant manager who was counting the sacks said: "You come pretty near breaking your can, didn't you." In a short time Giles brought in more sacks and as he stood between a pile of the sacks and the elevator watching the sorting he shifted around some, moving his feet slightly. One foot got near the edge of the runway and "seemed like his foot kind of give on something there on the runway" and when his foot seemed to give "he put his hand up on that bar and it fell out." He got off balance and put "his left hand" up towards the bar and he fell down on the elevator floor. On cross-examination Arvin said: "It seemed like his foot give a little bit and he got over to that edge and he got off balance and he put that hand on this bar (demonstrating), is the only way I know how to explain it. . . . Q. The bar didn't make him loose his balance? A. He didn't have hold of the bar. Q. He was off balance before he ever reached for the bar or fell down on the elevator, wasn't he? A. Yes, sir. . . . Q. The bar on theelevator didn't make him fall down? A. Why I don't know how toanswer that. If the bar had stayed there, he wouldn't have felldown. If he had put his hands on it, he would have steadiedhimself. Q. If there had been a chair there and he had put his hand on it, it would have held him up? A. Yes. Q. And, if the chair had turned over, he would have fell on the floor? A. Certainly. . . . Q. Was he falling when he put his hand on the bar? A. No, it seemed to me [750] he got off balance, justlike I tell you. I don't *576 know about these things. And he put his hand on the bar and itcome out. Q. He was falling or off balance when he did that? A.I would say he was off balance. I wouldn't say he was falling. . . . Q. Of course, if there hadn't been any bar across theelevator there, he would have fallen on the floor of theelevator, wouldn't he? A. I don't know, if he hadn't put hishand on the bar, if he would have fell or not. I can't say that.I don't know those things."
Giles said his left foot got near the edge of the runway and "I lost my balance a little. . . . I twisted my foot that way a little and I lost my balance." He said he was off balance when he put his hand on the bar but that he was not then falling — that when he put his hand on the bar "it gave way" and he fell. He saw the bar before he fell but he did not know anything about its condition before he put his hand on it to catch his balance.
We cannot say with the appellants that this evidence conclusively shows that an open and known obvious condition caused and was the sole and proximate cause of Giles' fall. It may have been, as Arvin said, if there had been a chair there it would have held him up — or, if the chair had turned over he would have fallen. Or, "if the bar had stayed there he wouldn't have fell down." Or, as he said when asked whether Giles would have fallen, if there had been no bar there at all: "I don't know, if he hadn't put his hand on the bar, if he would have fell or not. I can't say that. I don't know those things." And neither does anyone else know absolutely what would have happened under these variously supposed conditions. The bar was there and it was worn and rounded on the ends and did not fit securely into the slots on the uprights. And the uprights were loose at the floor. The bar and the uprights were in such condition that the bar would and did fall on slight pressure. It may be that the bar need not have been there at all since the elevator was at that floor level but, it was there and was not in a very good state of repair. If it had not been there at all Giles would have tried to regain his balance with its aid and thereby might not have fallen at all or if he had fallen, not in the place and manner he did. Since the bar was there it is not unreasonable to say that it was there for some purpose or being there that one could rely on its being in such condition that it could be safely used to regain one's balance. If the elevator had not been at that floor level would the bar have been there? Would it have served its purpose? Proximate cause in this case was clearly and peculiarly a jury question. Northern v. Chesapeake Gulf Fisheries Co.,
[5] The test relied on by the appellants is applicable: "The test of whether there is a casual connection between the alleged negligence and the injury is that the facts show that, absent the negligent act, the injury would not have occurred." Rose v. Thompson, *577
[6] It is urged that the trial court erred in granting a new trial as to the appellant Keltner because the testimony only showed that she was the manager of the mill and not in full and exclusive control of the mill to the exclusion of her employer, the owner, and consequently no negligence was proved as to her. She says the evidence fails to show any act of misfeasance on her part.
To sustain her position the appellant manager, apparently, relies upon the converse of the rule that "an agent who undertakes the sole and complete control and management of the principal's premises is liable to third persons, to whom a duty is owing on the part of the owner, for injuries resulting therefrom from his negligence in failing to make or keep the premises in a safe condition." 2 Am. Jur. Sec. *578
334, p. 263. In other words, when an agent has or assumes full and complete control of his principal's premises the agent's liability to the public or to invitees is the same as that of the principal or owner. "An independent contractor or servant to whom the owner or possessor of land turns over the entire charge thereof is subject to the same liability for harm caused to others within or outside the land by his failure to exercise reasonable care to maintain the land in safe repair as though he were the possessor of the land." 2 Restatement, Torts, Sec. 387. Under this rule the agent must have taken over the entire control of the land or building. Annotations 20 A.L.R. 171; 99 A.L.R. 426. The rule is illustrated by the leading case of Orcutt v. Century Bldg. Co.,
This is not the limit of an agent's liability for negligence to his proprietor's or owner's business invitees, however. He is not liable to third persons for a mere failure to perform a duty owing to his principal only (2 Restatement, Agency, Sec. 352) but if he violates a duty which he owes to a third person he is answerable to such person for the consequences of his negligence (Devine v. Kroger Grocery Baking Co.,
As to the milling company the respondent relied upon the liability and duty of a possessor of land to its business invitee for a dangerous condition known to or discoverable by the possessor. 2 Restatement, Torts, Sec. 343. In the instant case the respondent plead that Miss Keltner was the manager and in complete and exclusive control of the mill. But he alleged as to the manager "that he was directed by defendants to place such sacks . . . on the said runway and space in front of said elevator . . ." He alleged that certain acts of negligence on the part of the defendants "operating separately and concurrently directly" caused him to fall. Specifically he described and relied upon the bar in front of the elevator and the defendants' knowledge or discoverable knowledge of its condition and that they could "have remedied said conditions" but did not; that they directed him to the hazardous place in front of the elevator and failed to warn him of its dangers. The respondent's evidence as to Miss Keltner's authority and duties was that she "was the manager of the Moundridge Milling Company" for a year and a half or two years and prior to that time she was employed by the mill as a secretary-stenographer. As to keeping up repairs she said: "It was up to me unless it was something real large; then it was referred to the office. Q. If it was a matter of remodeling or something like that, you would take it up with the office? A. Or a paint job. Q. A big job? A. Yes. Q. The matter of ordinary repairs was up to you? A. That is right." During the time she was manager there were no repairs on the elevator and she had never inspected it. When she testified in her own behalf and as a defense witness she stated that after Giles fell she knew the uprights were loose because she "had the boys repair them." Otherwise she had never inspected *580
the uprights or the bar, had no actual knowledge of their condition and had required no repairs on them during her managership. Under these circumstances and in view of her limited control over the premises and especially as to the described conditions it was for the jury to say whether she had breached her duty to the respondent in the particulars complained of since she directed him to the vicinity of the elevator, its uprights and the bar. 2 Restatement, Agency, Sec. 355; 2 Am. Jur., p. 264; Stith v. J.J. Newberry Co., supra; Hagerty v. Montana Ore Purchasing Co.,
The judgment sustaining both the motion to set aside the nonsuit and the motion for a new trial is affirmed and the cause is remanded. Westhues and Bohling, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.