106 Mo. App. 441 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
Plaintiffs, the mother and father of Carl J. Jackson, brought this action under sections 2864, 2865, 2866, Revised Statutes, to recover damages for his death which was occasioned by the alleged negligence of defendant. The petition, in addition to the facts constituting the negligence, alleged that the said Carl J. Jackson was the plaintiffs’ son on whom they were dependent for support and “who was under the age of twenty-one years and a single and unmarried man.”
The statute already referred to provides that the damages may be sued for first by the husband or wife of the deceased; or, if there be no husband or wife, or, if he or she fails to sue within six-months after such death, then by the minor child or children of the deceased; or, third, if such deceased be a minor and unmarried, then by the father and mother who may join in the suit, or, if either of them be dead, then by the survivor. In Barker v. Railway, 91 Mo. 86, the petition alleged that plaintiff “was the widow of the deceased Barker.” In the course of the opinion in the case it was said:
“So in the case now before us, where the action is brought by the widow after the expiration of the six months, her right to maintain the same is conditional and depends on the non-existence of the minor children, a material and necessary fact, as we think, and which was not alleged or proved. ... As in our judgment the fact, if such it is, that there was no minor child, was one material and necessary to be shown, to entitle the plaintiff to recover in this action, which was begun after the six months had expired, and as thére was no evidence offered in that behalf, the instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, asked by the defendant at the close of the evidence, should have been*446 given. And in the absence of the proper averment in the petition, and in the failure of the proof as to whether there were such minor children, we feel constrained to reverse the judgment and remand the cause.”
McIntosh v. Railway, 103 Mo. 131, was a suit by the husband and wife, as here, to recover damages under the statute for the death of a son alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the railway company. The petition inter alia alleged that the deceased was the son of plaintiff and a “minor under the age of twenty-one years” at the time of his death. In the opinion it was said: “The right of the parent to maintain the action depends in part on the facts that he left neither widow nor minor children surviving him, and those facts should he alleged and proved if denied. If it appeared from the petition that, the deceased was of such tender years as to justify the inference that he was unmarried and childless at his death it might suffice, in view of the code rules requiring a liberal construction of pleadings —Revised Statutes 1889, sec. 2074 — and directing courts to consider substance rather than form, Revised Statutes 1889, see. 2117, but this petition permits no such inference. Its allegations indicate that he was employed as a switchman and brakeman in defendant’s railway yards . . when injured. From this statement it can not fairly he inferred that he was too young to he married. In the absence of some showing direct or inferential that he was unmarried, the petition is fatally defective.”
In Sparks v. Railway, 31 Mo. App. 111, which was also an action under the statute to recover damages for the death of the plaintiff’s son, the petition alleged that plaintiff “was the mother of deceased and that his father was dead at the time of the accident,” and that deceased was then “a minor under the age of twenty-one years and plaintiff’s only child living. ’ ’ The defendant questioned the sufficiency of this petition on the ground
Neither of these cases, however, nor any of the others to which we have been cited by defendant’s counsel sustain his contention. The petition under review does expressly allege that the deceased — plaintiffs ’ son —was a minor and unmarried at the time of the accident. There is nothing in the reasoning of the opinion in any of the-cases to which we have-been referred that would justify the conclusion that in an action of this kind that it is required of the plaintiffs to not only allege that the deceased was a minor and unmarried but that he left no minor children surviving him.
It seems to us that when the petition in addition to the facts of the negligence alleges that the deceased child was a minor and unmarried at the time of his death that it states all that is required to constitute a cause of action under the statute. This is prima facie negation of the fact that he left a child or children surviving him.
The evidence tended to show that at the time the plaintiffs’ son received the injury resulting in his death he was working in defendant’s mine and his duties were to take the tub from the cable which was lowered into the shaft and run it on cars to the face of a drift several feet away, there load it with dirt and return it, hook it
It is contended that deceased who was at work at the bottom of the shaft and the man-who was at work at its mouth were fellow-servants, and that therefore the negligence of the latter in respect to keeping the linchpin in the axle of the car, and in consequence of which the wheel came off and fell upon the latter occasioning his death, did not render defendant liable.
The deceased and the man handling the tub at the mouth of the shaft were both what is called, in mining parlance, “tub-hustlers.” They were under different foremen, the latter of whom were in the employment of a common master. Both ‘ ‘ tub-hustlers ’ ’ were co-operating together in the transportation of dirt from the face of the drift to the mill at the time of the injury. In performing the duties required of each of them they were fellow-servants, though each discharged his respective duty under distinct individuals as the master’s representative for direction in his work. At the time of
We may concede the plaintiffs’ contention to the effect that the fellow-servant rule does not apply where the accident arises from the failure of the master to discharge such positive duties as providing a safe place in, and safe instrumentalities with which to do the wort required of the servant; but in the present case the defendant was not chargeable with neglect of any such duty. The place, machinery, appliances, etc., furnished the deceased and his colaborer were reasonably safe. We think there was an abundance of evidence adduced showing that the defendant had provided and kept on hand linchpins at all times accessible to such of its employees as should have occasion to use them while engaged in operating its tub ears. There was no omission of duty in that regard. The neglect of the ‘ ‘ tub-hustler ’ ’ at the mouth of the shaft to put in the linchpin which had been removed from his car on the night previous to the injury, was the negligence of a fellow-servant of the deceased for which, under the law, as we understand it, the defendant was not liable.
From these conclusions it must necessarily follow that the defendant’s instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence should have been given instead of refused; and for this error the judgment must be reversed.