Action founded on a personal injury. The appellant company maintains a large tank near its depot in the town of Mexico; Missouri, whence its locomotives take water. About one and one-half miles from the depot is a pond which supplies water to the tank. This pond is immediately south of defendant’s right of way. Between twenty and thirty feet west of it are an engine and pump used to force the water through pipes into the tank at the depot. The engine and pump are inclosed in a frame house twenty feet square of two rooms, and the evidence goes to show there is an entrance to each room, one on the west- and one on the south side of the house. The access to this house from the railroad and the public road was quite inconvenient. It was fenced except on the side next to the right of way, but there was a narrow opening between a post of the fence and a bridge abutment which a person could get through. This opening was two hundred feet from the pump house. To get to the house from the railroad, it is necessary to go down a high dump. The motive power of the engine is gasoline and a part of the contrivance is a cylinder in which the gasoline is exploded. A flywheel connected with the engine is near the northwest corner of the room, and a metal shaft two and one-half inches in diameter and five or six feet long, ran from the engine to near the east side of the room. By means of a cog at its east end which worked into another cog attached to a perpendicular shaft, the horizontal shaft transferred the power from the engine to the perpendicular shaft which ran below the floor, and, as we understand, operated the pump. The horizontal shaft ran east and west within four or five feet of the south wall of the building and the space between it and the wall was vacant. The house is about a quarter of a mile from the city limits and the
In two of the instructions given for the respondent, the court noticed, as though it bore on the case, the rule of law against leaving dangerous machinery unguarded in a spot where children are likely, from their natural impulses, to play with it, or otherwise expose themselves to injury from its movements. In one of those instructions, the jury was told that if the owner or occupant of grounds creates and maintains thereon something espec
In the fourth instruction for the respondent, the same proposition was again alluded to in a negative way, but not as a basis for a verdict in respondent’s favor. The condition on which the jury was directed by that instruction to give a verdict for the respondent, was a finding that Kenealy carelessly started the engine when he knew respondent was in a position to be caught and injured by the machinery. It allowed a recovery although the jury believed respondent had been guilty himself of contributory negligence in going into the engine house, without permission, if the engineer, by- ordinary care, could have avoided hurting him after he was seen to be exposed to danger.
Though a verdict was not authorized on the theory that the accident was due to carelessness in leaving a machine where children were apt to be hurt by it, the court refused to take that theory out of the case by instructing, as defendant requested, that there was no testimony to show it had been guilty of that sort of negligence. We think prejudical error was committed in bringing the-subject before the jury. Probably that doctrine is sound if cautiously applied; but in the present case, every fact essential to its application is lacking. The machinery had not been left unattended, -but, when the accident occurred, and constantly, so far as appears, was in charge of a competent engineer. It was remote from any residence, and was inclosed in a building so that there was no access to it except through the doorways; which, of course, ■ defendant company was not required to keep fastened during a summer day. Children came about the pond and the precincts of the engine house, but this
It is insisted by the appellant that, even though its servant in charge of the pumping engine requested the respondent to help him to start the machinery, defendant is not answerable, for the reason that the invitation was beyond , the scope of the engineer’s authority. In support of this proposition, we are cited to several decisions of this State and some from other states. [Snyder v. R. Co., 60 Mo. 413; Sherman v. R. Co., 72 Mo. 62; Mangan v. Foley, 33 Mo. App. 250; Flower v. R. Co., 69 Pa. St. 216; Everhart v. R. Co., 78 Ind. 292; R. Co. v. Lindley 42 Kan. 714; R. Co. v. Harrison, 48 Miss. 112; Church v. R. Co., 50 Minn. 218.] Those cases maintain the doctrine that a master is not answerable for a negligent or willful tort of his servant unless the act is done in the general scope of the servant’s employment; and, without doubt, this is sound law. As to whether the applications of it in all instances have been just, there is doubt; and in truth, the decisions on the subject are irreconcilable. Much injustice is done nowadays in applying the doctrine of respondeat superior; sometimes by unduly curtailing its application, but in the vast majority of instances by unduly extending it. A master i.s liable for the tort of his servant committed in direct dis
But this matter must be considered from another point of view. It cannot be said with certainty that entering the room was the proximate cause of the accident. It rather looks like the accident wag due, either to some imprudence of the boy after he got in the room, or to carelessness on the part of Kenealy while he was in there, or to both causes. If Kenealy invited him into the room, he knew he was exposed to danger, and was under the legal duty of observing care for the boy’s safety, proportionate to the danger. The vital questions in the case are whether he used proper care under the circumstances to prevent injury to the boy, and whether the boy himself, his age considered, was guilty of contributory negligence. The cause should be treated, we think, in accordance Avith the vieAvs expressed in this opinion and that it may bé, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.