249 Mo. 342 | Mo. | 1913
The plaintiff, a minor, through his curator, filed this action in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, for personal injuries. The court, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, sustained a demurrer thereto; whereupon plaintiff entered an involuntary nonsuit, which nonsuit was, upon the motion of plaintiff, subsequently made, set aside and a new trial granted as to all the defendants except Baker & Knell. Said Baker & Knell were original defendants, made such on the theory that they were joint tortfeasors, arising
Edward Bntler was a party defendant at the trial below, hut having since died, the cause was revived against James J. Butler, and the Mercantile Trust Company, as executors of his estate. One Daniel Evans, a building contractor for the repairs in question, and employed by a contract with Edward Butler to make the same, was also a party defendant. From the order granting a new trial, defendant Universal Adding Machine Company (hereinafter for convenience called the Machine Company), and Edward Butler took separate- appeals to this court. For convenience, since the case was tried below as a unit, these appeals will he considered here together. Defendant Evans did not appeal from the order granting a new trial,-and need not have further place in the case here, except in so far as his acts may affect others.
It is alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and shown by the evidence, that on the date on which plaintiff was injured, to-wit, August 9, 1907, and for some months prior thereto, defendant Machine Company was operating a factory in a building owned by defendant Edward Butler in the city of St. Louis, and that in July, 1907, while defendant Machine Company was thus, as tenant, in possession of said building, Edward Butler contracted with defendant Daniel Evans to add an additional story to the building in question, and that Butler employed defendants Baker & Knell as architects to supervise the construction by the contractor Evans of this additional story. The plans for the changes proposed in the building were approved by the Machine Company, the latter agreeing to pay an increased rental after the completion of the additional story, and agreeing, upon completion of the same, to enter into a new lease with defendant Edward Butler, to run for fifteen years. Such proposed new lease was not in fact executed, but merely agreed so to be. The
In the rear of the building in question there was a passageway leading through the building and into an open alley on the north;.in this passageway an inclined platform, or runway, was placed. This runway was constructed, except for the latter five or six feet, on an incline, starting at about a distance of fifteen inches from the floor, running on a level for some four. feet, and then inclining upward to the point of egress on the alley, which alley was some five or six feet higher than the floor of the building. On one side of this runway and of the passageway in question, there was located a locker room, and on the other side of said passageway and runway a toilet room. The locker room was supplied with metal lockers, which were used by plaintiff and other employees within which to place their clothing while at work. These lockers were constructed of large wire mesh, strengthened by iron bands at the comers, top and bottom, and were about five feet in height.
In preparing to erect the additional story on the building, the employees of contractor Evans entered the locker room of defendant Machine Company, removed the wire screen which separated the locker room from the runway and passageway, and partially filled it with lumber and other material. In order that the place might be thus used and in order to place in position certain large beams with which to support some part of the work that Evans was preparing to construct, it became, or was deemed, necessary by the contractor to remove some of the lockers, which was done, and the lockers removed were taken out into the passageway and placed in a leaning position against the
As shown by the testimony on the part of the plaintiff, under the rules by which plaintiff worked, he and his fellow-servants were allowed only some twenty five minutes at the noon lunch hour within which to visit the watercloset, to wash their hands in the wash troughs situated in the locker room, and to eat their lunches. At 12:25 plaintiff was required to be back at his bench ready to resume labor at the sound of the gong. .
^The testimony in this case, as given by plaintiff himself and other witnesses for plaintiff (including the foreman of defendant Machine Company in charge of the department in which plaintiff worked), was that during the noon hour the employees were allowed to and did eat their lunches wherever about the building they chose. Some of them sat at their benches while eating; some of them frequently sat on the inclined platform or runway while eating; others went out into the alley, presumably over the runway, and others to a grocery store across the street. There was evidence
As stated, the lockers which fell were leaning against the runway or inclined platform and were therefore very near the toilet rooms. These toilet rooms as well as the wash troughs in the locker room, were continued in use by the foreman and superintendent of defendant Machine Company, as well as by all of the employees thereof, during all the time the repairs were being made. No other toilet rooms, wash troughs, or lockers were provided. Such condition of use by all parties also continued, as the evidence shows, during the whole of the time that the lockers in question were so leaning against the platform. It is not clear from the evidence whether- the identical locker, or lockers, which fell upon plaintiff, were being used for clothes or not; but it is clear that the locker room and many other of the lockers were being so used, plaintiff testifying that he was then using his locker, and that it was in the passageway between the inclined platform and the corner of the lócker room. Since, however, the entire roof of this part of the building was, at the time of the injury, off, and since a tarpaulin had been spread over the lockers for some purpose, we may reasonably
In other words, the testimony does not disclose any change in use of any part of this portion of the premises while the repairs were proceeding. The evidence indicates conclusively that the wash troughs, the waterclosets, the passageway and some, if not all, of the lockers, were being used while the repairs were making, for the same purpose and just as these accessories had been theretofore used, and subject only to the inconvenience arising from the timbers and other material placed therein and thereabouts, and from the removal and change in position of the lockers.
The foreman of defendant Machine Company, testifying for plaintiff, says that the employees of said company were permitted to eat their lunches at any place about the building they chose; that he gave them no instructions as to this, either before repairs began or while same were proceeding; that he got no orders from his superiors as to this matter and that he gave none to plaintiff or to plaintiff’s fellow-servants.
Defendants representing Edward Butler, deceased (herein for brevity, called Butler), are sought to he held liable from the fact that Butler was the owner of the building, the landlord of defendant Machine Company, and that as such owner he contracted for a hazardous and unsafe method of doing the repair work, reserving to himself, through his architects, Baker & Knell, the right to inspect and supervise such work. His ownership of the building is not controverted; the fact that possession and operation of the factory by defendant Machine Company continued during the repair work, appears from the record, and the reservation of the right .to supervise and inspect, so far as it
“It is understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that the work included in this contract is to be done under the direction of the said architects, and that their decision as to the true construction and meaning of the drawings and specifications shall be final. ’ ’
We shall refer in the opinion to the duty enjoined upon defendant Machine Company, as set out in plaintiff’s petition, as well as the manner in which said alleged duty is averred to have been violated by defendants.
The answer of the defendants is a general denial to which is added a plea of contributory negligence, averred to have arisen from the alleged act of plaintiff in going to and remaining in a part of the building where he was not obliged to go in the discharge of his duties as the servant of defendant Machine Company, and which place was not at the time a place furnished for the use or convenience of plaintiff, and that plaintiff contributed to whatever injuries he sustained by failing to exercise ordinary care to observe his surroundings, and get out of the way of the locker in question. Plaintiff’s reply was a general denial.
Such other facts as it may become necessary to state, if any, will be set out in the subjoined opinion.
I. The issues clearly made by the pleadings, with which, and with the legal contentions made, we are under the evidence alone concerned, are: (1) Was there any actionable negligence? (2) If so, whose negligence, or omission of duty, caused the injury? and (3) could the plaintiff be guilty, and was he, under the facts, guilty of such negligence on his part, as contributing to his own hurt, precludes recovery? These in their order.
“That the said defendants herein, jointly and severally, had, kept and maintained upon said premises, among other things, the following machinery, appliances and equipment, to-wit: Certain ponderous iron or steel lockers, water closets and platform; that said machinery, appliances and equipments were situated in the rear part.of said premises, and were provided by the defendants herein for their joint and individual use, and for the joint and individual use, convenience and accommodation of the servants and employees of the defendants herein, and for persons invited to use or occupy the said premises by the said defendants; that it was the duty of the defendants herein, jointly and severally, to maintain the said premises, machinery, appliances and equipments aforesaid in a reasonably safe condition.”
And the negligent omission in the performance of the duty is stated thus:
_ “That the said defendants jointly and severally neglecting and disregarding their duties aforesaid, neglected to furnish, provide and keep the said premises, at the time and place aforesaid, in a reasonably safe condition, and carelessly and negligently invited plaintiff into a place of danger.”
The specific act of negligence averred and that which is said to have caused plaintiff’s hurt, is alleged to be “that one of the lockers was negligently and carelessly placed by defendants in a leaning and dangerous position at a point near the said water closet,” and that while plaintiff, being there in the line of his duty, was seated on the platform mentioned, the locker fell and injured him.
Under the facts as we find them in the record before us, we think that the duty to furnish plaintiff safe premises and a safe place in which to work, was. violated, since under this rule such safe place to work is not restricted to the identical situs of the labor, but extends to the exercise by the employer of ordinary care to see that the means of egress and ingress are ordinarily safe, and extends to all places about the premises, known to the master to be used, or which
In the instant case actual knowledge of such use of the rear part of the building on the part of the foreman of the Machine Company, who had charge of the straightening department in which plaintiff was employed, is shown by the record. This foreman says that the employees were free to eat their lunches wherever they chose, and that during the time the repairs in question were being made, and at the time of the injury of plaintiff, the water closets and wash rooms were being used by employers and employees.
The fact of the. intermission for the purpose of eating lunch did not, under the facts shown in evidence here, suspend the duty owed by the employer to furnish the employee a safe place to work. [Heldmaier v. Cobbs, 195 Ill. 172; Railroad v. Maddux, 134 Ind. 571; Boyle v. Columbian Fire Proofing Co., 182. Mass. 93; and cases cited, supra.]
We conclude, therefore, that there was a breach of a duty owed to plaintiff, and that unless his own negligence caused his injury, there was a liability existing upon some one or more defendants, to respond therefor in damages.
II. By whose negligence was the injury caused? From what has been said above herein, we conclude that a liability existed (the exception of non-liability, by reason of contributory negligence barring recovery being reserved) as against the defendant Universal Adding Machine Company.
“The general rule is that one who lets a contract for work, and retains no control over the work or the method of doing it, is not liable for the negligence, or other wrong of the contractors.”
The four reasons urged by counsel for plaintiff, as exceptions to the general rule, which they concede, and upon one or more of which they seek to fix liability upon Butler, are (a) contracting for an unsafe result; (b) statutory liability to do the work efficiently; (c) that the work was extra-hazardous, and (d) the duty of the owner to maintain the safety of the premises.
We have with great care examined the cases cited by counsel, on the several points urged. On the exception (a) to the general rule our attention is called to the case of Gorham v. Gross, 125 Mass. 232, which was an action in tort for the resulting damages, from the falling of a party-wall, built by an independent contractor under contract with the defendant, where the latter reserved and exercised the privilege of supervision through. architects. Here the reason for the accrual of liability was clearly, that the owner had contracted for an unsafe finished result.
The statute cited on the exception (b) dealing with liability arising from the neglect to perform a
The cases cited upon the exception (c) making the landlord liable, where he employs an independent contractor to perform extra-hazardous work, without adopting suitable means to protect others, are not in point on the facts here. The case of Wetherbee v. Partridge, 175 Mass. 185, was in tort for damages done by an independent contractor, acting for defendant therein in doing blasting on the land of defendant. There is, we take it, a distinction, both in law and in common usage, between the term hazardous and the term extra-hazardous. That the work which Butler had agreed with defendant Machine Company was attended with danger, the continued use of the building pending the work considered, we concede, and if any of the dangers which we can conceive as probable had in fact occurred (e. g., the falling of brick or stone or tools or other objects upon the employees), and plaintiff had been injured by such objects, or if the walls, or the roof being improperly or unsafely constructed, had fallen and in falling hurt plaintiff, this case might fall into the category of one of the exceptions urged. We merely suggest this; we are not called on to pass on it here.
The grounds upon which liability of a landlord accrues for torts occurring upon his real property, where the same is being dealt with by an independent contractor, are clearly stated by Mr. Moll in his treatise on Independent Contractors, section 65, page 127, as follows:
“ ‘As well stated in recent New York cases, there are but three cases in which the owner of fixed property is responsible for acts done upon it which result in injury to another: (1) Where the person doing the act stands towards the proprietor in the rela*365 tion of employee or servant; (2) where the act as authorized by a contract between tbe proprietor and actor necessarily produced tbe injury; (3) where tbe injury was occasioned by tbe omission of some duty imposed on tbe proprietor.’ ‘Where tbe employer personally interferes with tbe work and tbe acts performed by him occasion tbe injury; where tbe thing contracted to be done is unlawful; where tbe acts performed create a public nuisance; and where tbe employer is bound by statute to do a thing efficiently and an injury results from its inefficiency; these are tbe only cases where a person employing a contractor is liable for bis torts.’
“ ‘The rule of independent contractor (i. e., employer) and non-liability for tbe negligence of a contractor employed by him, or by tbe agents or servants of tbe latter, is subject to exceptions: First, when duties are imposed upon him by law, (a) by statute or ordinances, (b) by express contract to indemnify: Second, where tbe employer is at fault, (a.) in defective construction inherent in tbe plan, (b) where be retains tbe right to direct tbe time and manner of work, (c) ratifies or adopts unauthorized wrongs, (d) by not furnishing proper appliances required by law, (e) interfering with tbe work, or (f) is negligent in selecting a careful contractor: Third, where tbe work to be done is wrongful or dangerous in itself (a) that it would ordinarily cause a nuisance, (b) where tbe job in its very construction ordinarily becomes dangerous, however carefully performed.’ ”
But whatever tbe hazard or unsafeness of Butler’s methods of repair may have been, plaintiff was not hurt by anything in such methods, approaching tbe stature of a proximate cause. He was hurt by tbe falling of a part of tbe furniture, or a trade fixture it may have been, of defendant Machine Company, which was negligently misplaced by a servant of defendant Evans. [Boss v. Jarmulowsky, 81 N. Y.
“It is understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that the work included in this contract is to be done under the direction of the said architects, and that théir decision as to the true construction and meaning of the drawings and specifications shall be final.”
It may, we think, be conceded that an employer “may make himself liable by retaining the right to direct and control the time and manner of executing the work, or by interfering with the contractor and
No omission of statutory duty is involved as to Butler, for the reason, if for no other, that persons of different sexes are not shown by the evidence to have been employed, as required as a condition precedent by section 7836', Revised Statutes 1909: And pursuant to section 7857, Revised Statutes 1909, the duty enjoined goes to the employer and did not fall on Butler, the landlord. It is extremely probable that tliis is also the correct view as to the falling of the duty enjoined (violation of which is made penal) in section 7836, supra, but on this we need not pass. But it is not necessary to pass, in the view we take of it, upon the question whether, under all the facts here, the doing of the work by Butler, through his contract- or, Evans, under the supervision of his architects, as shown by the excerpt supra, constituted so unsafe a place, or was a contract for so unsafe a result, as rendered Butler liable on this ground alone, for the defaults of his independent contractor. Should we find it necessary, as we do not, to pass on this point, there is such lack of evidential detail in the case as to render it impossible to apply the law urged upon us, to the paucity of fact shown by the record. Much, it seems to us, would depend upon the present-day ability of architects and builders to do these things safely. We do not know from the evidence here, nor
We do say that the mere displacement of a part of the furniture, the personal property of defendant Machine Company, situated upon a different floor of the building from that intended to be repaired by defendant Evans, was not, under the facts here, such proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff to make Butler liable, but was merely what has been called a casual or collateral tort of the independent contractor, and that as to Butler the court erred in setting aside the involuntary nonsuit. [Moll on Independent Contractors, sec. 66; Boss v. Jarmulowsky, supra; Hoff v. Shockley, supra; Louthan v. Hewes, supra; Ridgeway v. Downing Co., supra.]
HI. Coming now to the last point' urged by appellants, and laid aside for discussion, viz.: (a) Can plaintiff, a minor, between seventeen and eighteen years of age, upon the facts, be charged with contributory negligence barring recovery; and (b) was there, under the facts here, such negligence as would bar him from recovery if he were sui juris¶
There is no fixed rule of law by which to gauge, or scale by which to nicely weigh, the acts of a minor, to determine if he is guilty of contributory negligence. Each set of facts stand, in a sense, upon their own bottom, and are to be judged by commonsense — of the variety sometimes called in the vernacular, “horse-sense.”
Touching this question and its corollaries, confusion exists among the authorities which would be astounding, but for the comforting maxim' of the. old copy-book, that “circumstances alter cases.” In fact the usual legal definition of ordinary care must give us pause, it having been said to be that “care which an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under similar conditions and circumstances.” We notice judicially that jurors are never infants — in years. They are told in effect to pass upon the question of ordinary care by squaring the facts upon their own conduct as persons of prudence and in the last analysis and upon
In the ease of Higgins Carpet Co. v. O’Keefe, 25 C. C. A. 220, it was- laid down as a rule that after passing the age of fourteen years a child is presumed to be capable of avoiding danger by the exercise of due care. “And this,” says Labatt, 1 Master and Servant, sec. 348, “is probably the rule in all jurisdictions.” After collecting all of the authorities the above-named author’s deductions may be thus summed up: “ (a) An infant of the age of fourteen years is presumed to have sufficient capacity to be sensible of danger and to have power to avoid it, and this "presumption will stand till overthrown by clear proof of the absence of such discretion, (b) An infant between the age of ten and fourteen years must be shown to have capacity, in the particular instance, to understand and avoid danger.” [Beven on Negligence in Law (3 Ed.), footnote, p. 166.] “The measure of responsibility varies with each additional year. It mates no sudden leap at the age of fourteen. That is simply the convenient point at which the law, founded upon experience, changes the presumption of capacity, and puts upon the infant the burden of showing his personal want of the intelligence, prudence, foresight or strength usual in those of such age.” [Beven on Negligence (3 Ed.), p. 166.] “But generally, where the age of the infant is such as to make it a debatable question whether or not he possessed sufficient intelligence or experience to know or appreciate the danger he encountered, as a result of his own act, the ques
Our own courts- have encountered the same difficulties in devising a rule in this behalf as have the courts of other jurisdictions: Valliant, J., in Holmes v. Railroad, 190 Mo. l. c. 105-106, tersely states the rule as to the duty of the court, the care required to avoid injuring minors, and the care required of the minor, as follows:
“We have said that it is sometimes a question of fact and sometimes a question of law, and such is the form of expression frequently used by law-writers on this subject, and in a certain sense it is correct. Strictly speaking, however, the question of whether a child is old enough to be held responsible for his conduct as for contributory negligence is always a question of fact appealing to common sense, rather than to the science of law for an answer. But when the evidence is all one way and such that there can be one answer*372 to the question the court should decide it without submitting it to the jury. . . .
“And even when a child has reached years of discretion, and .become,, as a matter of law, responsible for his conduct, no higher degree of care will be expected of him than is usually exercised by persons of similar age, judgment and experience. . . . And conversely, a much higher grade of care and watchfulness must he exercised to avoid injuring children than would constitute ordinary care towards an adult; that is, what is ordinary care towards an adult of' full capacity may he culpable negligence towards a child. As the standard.of care thus varies with the age, capacity and experience of the child, it is usually, if not always, where the child is not wholly irresponsible, a question of fact for the jury whether a child exercised the ordinary care and prudence of a child similarly situated; and if such care was exercised, a recovery can he had for an injury negligently inflicted, no matter how far the care used by the child falls short of the standard which the law erects for determining what is ordinary care in a person of full age and capacity.’ ”
Judge Valliant then quotes from an opinion of Judge Macfarlane, in Burger v. Railroad, 112 Mo; 238, as follows:
“A hoy may have all the knowledge of an adult respecting the dangers which will attend a particular act, but at the same time he may not have the prudence, thoughtfulness and discretion to avoid them, which are possessed by the ordinarily prudent adult person. Hence, the rule is believed to he recognized in all the courts of the country, that a child is not negligent if he exercises that degree of care which, under like circumstances, would reasonably he expected of one of his years and capacity. "Whether he used such care in a particular case, is a question for the jury. [Beach on Contributory Negligence, sec. 117; Eswin v. Railroad, 96 Mo. 290; O’Flaherty v. Railroad, 45 Mo. 70;*373 Plumley v. Birge, 124 Mass. 57; Meibus v. Dodge, 38 Wis. 300; Railroad v. Young, 81 Ga. 397.]”
“That is the doctrine of this court announced in many other decisions. [Spillane v. Railroad, 135 Mo. 414; Ruschenberg v. Railroad, 161 Mo. 70; Campbell v. Railroad, 175 Mo. 161.]”
The rule is quoted by Gantt, J., from an opinion by Mr. Justice Lamar, U. S. Supreme Court, in O’Mellia v. Railroad, 115 Mo. l. c. 221, as follows:
“The policy of the law has relegated the determination of such questions to the jury under proper instructions from the court. It is their province to note the special circumstances and surroundings of each particular case and then say whether the conduct of the parties in that case was such as would be expected of reasonable, prudent men under a similar state of affairs.- When a given state of facts is such that reasonable men may fairly differ upon the question as to whether there was negligence or not, the matter is for the jury. It is only where the facts are such that all reasonable men must draw the same conclusion from them that the question of negligence is ever considered as one of law for the court.”
Judge Bland of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, considering this troublesome point, in Sailer v. Shoe Co., 130 Mo. App. 722, said:
“As a youth grows in years and experience, he becomes more and more amenable to the rules of law in respect to the assumption of risk and contributory negligence applicable to adults, but there is no period of minority at which a court can say, as a matter of law, he, in this respect, stands on the same plane as an adult. His capacity, not his age, is the criterion by which his responsibility and conduct should be measured ; and whether or not a youth assumes the ordinary risks incident to his employment, or was guilty of negligence which contributed to his injury, where no instructions are given or the dangers of his employ-*374 meat pointed out to Mm by Ms employer, is almost always a question for the jury, and is always so where different inferences are fairly dedncfble from the evidence. [Anderson v. Railroad, 161 Mo. 411; Heinzle v. Railway, 182 Mo. 528; Anderson v. Railroad, 81 Mo. App. 116; Fry v. Transit Co., 111 Mo. App. l. c. 333; Edwards v. Railroad, 112 Mo. App. l. c. 659; Bntler v. Railway, 117 Mo. App. 360.] ”
Lamm, J., in the case of McGee v. Railroad, 214 Mo. l. c. 546, while holding under the facts shown that contributory negligence barred recovery, said:
“When an issue of fact is framed and put to a jury on the question of the negligence of a minor the general rule is to so frame the instruction as to graduate the degree of care demauded of a child to his age and capacity. That rule requires that a child should be judged as a child and not as a man. But the rule does not mean that the question is always to be submitted to a jury. Children may be declared as a matter of law non sui juris at certain tender years and with certain infantile judgments. Then, again, they may be declared sui juris as a matter of law when their age, capacity and the circumstances under which they act are all considered. It may be taken as the most enlightened and accepted doctrine in the case of infants that generally the question of their contributory negligence is one for the jury. But "it is not the accepted doctrine that it may not under given circumstances be dealt with as a matter of law. If the facts are few and simple, devoid of confusion and complications, and if the danger to be avoided is so apparent as to be within the easy comprehension of a boy of thirteen years of age, if that boy is shown to be of bright intelligence and of a judgment training him to caution and care in the matter in hand — we say all these things being admitted, then there is no reason why the judge on the bench may not as a matter of law*375 under the facts of the given case declare there could he no two opinions among’ reasonable men about the negligence of such a boy measured by the standard of an ordinarily prudent boy.”
Where the danger is well-known, plain, patent and obvious, and where the minor is of an age setting in action the presumption of law noted, and when he is bright and intelligent, no reason can be urged against holding him accountable for his own negligent acts. But where, as in the instant case, the danger was latent and not obvious, where the lethal instrumentality was partially 'or wholly covered, where the persons charged with the duty of providing for plaintiff a safe place to work did not observe it, and where, indeed, but one witness out of a dozen men claims to have seen the impending danger, are we warranted in declaring as a matter of law, that the infant defendant was so negligent as to utterly preclude recovery. The triers of fact having the plaintiff before them may be able from his manner on the stand, of testifying, from his appearance, intelligence and other facts to say whether as to the danger to which he exposed himself, he shall be judged as a child or as a man full-grown. We relegate to the triers of fact the decision upon this point and hold that the question of whether plaintiff was, under the facts, guilty of contributory negligence, is a question for the jury.
It results that the case should be reversed as to J'ames J. Butler and Mercantile Trust Company, as executors of Edward Butler, deceased, and affirmed and remanded as to the defendant Universal Adding Machine Company, and it is so ordered.