58 Mo. App. 27 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
This is an action for damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff, February 13, 1893, while working in defendant’s machine and repair shops at Moberly, Missouri. Plaintiff and two others, Garnett and Phipps, composed what was called the * ‘stripping gang,” whose duty, among others, required
The testimony in behalf of the plaintiff tended to establish about the following state of facts: That Halliburton, Grarnett and Phipps composed the “stripping gang” in the Moberly shops, Phipps being the head man of the three or “straw boss,” and that one M. T. Phillips was the foreman, having charge of this stripping gang, and that they were subject to his orders. That on the thirteenth day of February, 1893, it became the duty of plaintiff and said Phipps and Grarnett to place the wheels under a “ten-wheeler” engine by means of a “drop-pit,” having a track thereon, the table of the “drop-pit” being raised and lowered by machinery. That the first wheels to be placed in position under the engine were drive wheels of great weight, without flanges, and somewhat beveled on the edges of the tires, known as “blind drivers.” That to accomplish the work of placing the several pairs of wheels belonging to the engine in place it was necessary to place a pair at a time on the table of the “drop-pit,” then lower the table by means of the machinery which operates the same; then roll the pair of wheels to their proper position under the engine; •then elevate said table so as to bring the wheels up
The case was submitted to a jury under instructions ' from the court, resulting in a finding' and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $1,500 and defendant appealed.
1. Reversal is asked on three grounds: First, that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained, because, admitting* the defendant’s negligence, the danger in performing the work of adjusting the wheels in the manner directed by the defendant’s foreman, was so obvious to the plaintiff that to enter upon the work constituted negligence on his part, or that he assumed such patent risk; second, that there was a conflict in instructions; and, third, that the damages are excessive.
The general principles of law applicable to cases of this kind are so well understood that repetition has become tedious. The master is required to supply reasonably safe appliances for the use of the servant. He is required also to consider the safety of the servant, and should not expose him to needless hazard as to the place where the work is prosecuted or the manner of its performance. Whether it be the tools, implements, and machinery the servant is to handle or operate, or whether it be the place or the manner of doing the work, it is made the duty of the employer to carefully guard and protect the life and limb of the employee.
Now in order to sustain the contention of defendant’s counsel, in the case at bar, we must hold, that Halliburton, when ordered to adjust these drive wheels without “swinging,” must have seen and known that so to do would probably be attended with injury to himself, and that he could not avoid it by the exercise of care and caution; that such danger was so obvious that no man of ordinary prudence would have attempted it, but would have abandoned the service of the company rather than undertake the work in the manner directed; and we must hold, too, that as to this there could be but one conclusion in the minds of ordinarily prudent persons.
"We can not say this. We are not prepared to declare that obedience in this case was so threatening to life and limb, so palpably attended with danger that
The facts of this case are materially different from those of Fugler v. Bothe, 43 Mo. App. 44, which was transferred to the supreme court where the dissenting opinion of Judge Rombauer was adopted. There ah experienced mechanic was engaged in doing some carpenter’s work standing on a narrow projection in the interior of a building. He lost his balance and fell to the ground floor receiving injuries from which he died, and his widow sued for damages. There were no defects in the plank on which Fugler stood; the trouble was that the place was so narrow that the man could not handle himself thereon with safety. And the decision was put on the express ground that the servant in that case knew much better than the master whether or not he could handle his body on that space without losing his balance.
Considering the facts of the case at bar, as testified to by plaintiff and his witnesses, we must hold that the court properly declined to giye a peremptory instruction for the defendant.
II. As to the second and third points presented in defendant’s brief we discover no just cause of complaint. There is no conflict between plaintiff’s instruction number 1 and defendant’s number 3. The first
Judgment affirmed.