The question is whether plaintiff’s First Amended Petition states tort claims against his corporate employer and its officers and directors that are not barred by the Workers’ Comрensation Law’s exclusivity provisions, § 287.120.-1 & 2, RSMo. 1978:
1. Every employer subject to the provisions of this chapter shall be liable, irrespective of negligence, to furnish compensаtion under the provisions of this chapter for personal injury or death of the employee by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment, and shall be released from all other liability therefor whatsoever, whether to the employee or any other person.
* * * * * *
2. The rights and remedies herein granted to an emplоyee shall exclude all other rights and remedies of the employee ... at common law or otherwise, on account of such accidental injury or death, exсept such rights and remedies as are not provided for by this chapter.
The trial court’s answer was negative, and plaintiff appeals from the order dismissing his petition for fаilure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. We affirm.
The petition has four counts. Counts One and Two are against the employer Liberty Foundry Company (Liberty), a Missouri corporation that operates a steel foundry in St. Louis. Counts Three and Four are against Liberty’s officers and directors (individual defendants).
Count One alleges рlaintiff’s employment by Liberty as a “grinder” from 1965 through 1979, when he learned he had contracted silicosis. The substance of plaintiff’s claim in Count One is that “Liberty intentionally ... failed” both to сomply with statutory provisions for employee health and safety, see, e.g., Chapter 292, RSMo.1978, and to implement readily available safety measures and devices, and that the foundry was maintained “in a dangerous manner with inadequate ventilation, hazardous accumulations of poisonous and noxious substances, faulty and improper equipment, machinery, and facilities, and no monitoring of employees for the symptoms and onset of occupational disease.” Further: “[t]he injury of Plaintiff ... was the *62 natural and fоreseeable consequence of the intentional acts and omissions of Liberty [mentioned above] and was intended by Liberty.”
Count Two repeats Count One, except in lieu of the allegation that plaintiff’s injury “was intended by Liberty” is one that “Liberty knew or had reason to know that there was a strong probability that such injury would occur to some or all of its employees, including Plaintiff, as a result of such acts and omissions.”
Counts Three and Four against Liberty’s officers and directors restate the substance of Counts One and Two, rеspectively, except that the alleged acts of the individual defendants are that they “intentionally caused Liberty to do” what Liberty allegedly did in Counts One and Two.
Plaintiff’s clаim of contracting silicosis as a result of his working conditions at Liberty strongly suggests (to say the least) an occupational disease, hence a compensable “injury” under the Workers’ Compensation Law as the result of an “accident,” see:
Staples v. A. P. Green Fire Brick Company,
Plaintiff based his petition on the principles summarized at 2A A. Larsen, Workmen’s Compensation § 68, at 13-1 (1976) (hereafter cited as Larsen):
Intentional injury inflicted by the employer in person on his employee may be made the subject of a common-law action for damages on the theory that, in such an action, the emplоyer will not be heard to say that his intentional act was an “accidental” injury and so under the exclusive provisions of the compensation act. The same result may fоllow when the employer is a corporation and the assailant is, by virtue of control or ownership, in effect the alter ego of the corporation. * * *
And see:
Annot.,
[W]hat is being tested is .. . the narrow issue of intentional versus aсcidental quality of the precise event producing injury. The intentional removal of a safety device or toleration of a dangerous condition may or may nоt set the stage for an accidental injury later. But in any normal use of the words, it cannot be said, if such an injury does happen, that this was the deliberate infliction of harm cоmparable to an intentional left jab to the chin.
Thus, for employer conduct to be actionable as a “nonaccidental” cause of injury, the employer must intentionally act with the specific purpose of thereby injuring the employee.
Claims of the kind plaintiff tries to make here arise from the nature of the employer’s conduct rather than the nature of the employee’s injury, and it is still an open question whether they are cognizable under our law.
See: Gambrell v. Kan. City Chiefs’ Football Club,
Counts Three and Four were properly dismissed because neither alleges actionable conduct. The substantive allegations in both counts are that the individual defendants “intentionally caused Liberty[’s]” failures and shortcomings alleged earlier in Count One. No other conduct is alleged. A review of Liberty’s conduct alleged in Count One shows that thе gist of these latter two counts against the individual defendants is that they somehow “caused” an unsafe place for plaintiff to work. That they did so “intentionally” or “maliciously,” оr any other general averment of a state of mind, Rule 55.15, adds nothing by way of conduct to the petition because the aver-ments are conclusory and to be disregаrded when, as here, they are not supported by the petition’s allegations of fact. See:
Pillow v. General American Life Ins. Co.,
In
State ex rel. Badami v. Gaertner,
The order dismissing plaintiff’s First Amended Petition is affirmed.
