78 Mo. App. 39 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This is an action for personal injury in which plaintiff obtained judgment in the circuit court in the sum of $2,000 for the loss of an eye caused by poison.
Defendant contends that it Was not guilty of negligence and is not responsible for the accident. Plaintiff’s contention is not that defendant knew the fact established by experts that decayed matter of the kind described would produce poisonous bacteria, but that if defendant had been ordinarily prudent and careful it would have become informed of that scientific fact, and would have warned plaintiff of the danger and provided him with glasses to protect his eyes.
The case concedes that plaintiff did not know of the danger attendant upon such work.
“Occupations, however important, which can not be conducted without necessary danger to life, body or limb, should not be prosecuted at all without all reasonable pre
In Smith v. Car Works, supra, the servant with another was directed to carry molten iron from one room to another along an icy path on the outside of the building. In doing so, his companion slipped and fell on the ice, precipitating the iron on the ice causing an explosion and scattering the melted iron on the servant from the effect of which he died. The court held that while the servant must have had the common knowledge that ice was slippery and dangerous to
The case found in 156 U. S., supra, approving opinion of Severeus, L, of the federal circuit, 44 Fed. Rep. 748, was where a servant was injured by the explosion of dynamite and exploders, or fulminating caps, caused by exposure to too much heat, or to excessive jarring of the building by the machinery in use.
In the case of Fox v. Peninsular Works, 84 Mich. 676, a laborer sued a manufacturer of Paris green for injuries to his health caused by inhaling vapors arising in the process of manufacture, which is done by placing a mass of poisonous ingredients in a large vat and bringing it to a high degree of heat. The defendant was held liable for failing to inform plaintiff of the danger of inhaling such vapors. On this point the court said:
“A man might know that Paris green was a poison if taken internally, but not know that it would cause pustulation by handling, or be absorbed into the system and cause poisonous effects from contact with the outer surface of
"We think, therefore, that whether judged by the accepted rule making it the master’s duty to provide a reasonably safe place for his servant to work, and reasonably safe appliances to guard him, as well as may be, from the dangers of his employment; or whether judged by the current of authority applying the rule to a variety of uncommon cases, it may be safely said that it is the duty of the employer to become informed of those matters of scientific knowledge possessed by men of general education and information relative to the danger and hazard of. the business in which he is engaged. That he should give information of the danger to his uninformed employees, and should provide them with reasonably safe appliances for protection. And it is negligence to fail to comply with such duty.
In Mfg. Co. v. McCormick, 118 Pa. St. 519, a servant was engaged in painting the inside of a tank twelve feet deep. He had a lamp and a can of paint. An explosion occurred which injured him. It is supposed the explosion was occasioned by the quantity of benzine in the paint evaporating and filling the tank with explosive gas. The court said that, “the accident happening under such circumstances was outside the range of ordinary experience, and one, therefore, against which the measure of care due from the employer could not protect the servant,” unless the employer is to be considered an insurer. See also as bearing on the question O’Malley v. Railway, 113 Mo. 319. In the recent case of Hoepper v. Southern Hotel, 142 Mo. 378, it is said that a neglect to anticipate and guard against that which no reasonable man would expect to occur would not be negligence upon which an action could be based.
We are of the opinion that an application of this principle of law to the case before us exculpates defendant and causes a reversal of the judgment. The testimony of experts shows that the injury to plaintiff’s eye was caused by bacteria, a poisonous live object germinated in the decayed matter which had formed on the rail along which the carcasses of animals were propelled, as already described; that one or more of these lodged in plaintiff’s eye while he was at work cleaning the rail. It was shown that this substance on the rail when brushed off was a yellowish dust, which fell and settled about, among other places, over plaintiff’s clothing and on his face and hands and also over the fifteen or sixteen other persons engaged in the same service. This dust necessarily floated in and through the room and building. It was doubtless inhaled through the mouth or
I do not question but that a master may put his servant to work where he would come in contact with disease (a disease communicated by germs) for the doing of which he would be liable for the resulting injury, but it would be in such instances where it is- well known that the disease would probably be communicated, and not where the injurious result is so remote as to scarcely engage one’s attention. If a master should knowingly engage his child servant in a place where he would come in contact with contageous diseases common to children, he would be liable for the injurious consequences, but would be be liable for putting his man servant to work in the same place when the disease only attacked adults in the rarest instances, that happening to be one of them?
“A reasonable man does not consult his imagination, but can be guided only by a reasonable estimate of probabilities. The reasonable man, then, to whose ideal behavior we are to look as the standard of duty, will neither neglect what his reason and experience will enable him to forecast as probable, nor conduct on a basis of bare chances, a business whose success is dependent upon his accuracy in forecasting the future. He will order his precaution by
The foregoing from the texts of the authors mentioned, was quoted, adopted and applied by Burgess, J., in American Brewing Co. v. Talbot, 141 Mo. 674, a case in which it was sought to fix the charge of negligence on the defendant in not anticipating the sinking or settling of a warehouse caused by an unusual rise in the Mississippi river. It is held in that case that, “when an injury can not reasonably be anticipated and would not bave happened except under exceptionable circumstances, it is not negligence to fail to take precautionary, measures to prevent it, although if taken the injury would not have resulted.”
We are, therefore, of the opinion that plaintiff had no case and reverse the judgment.