114 Mo. App. 396 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
In January, 1904, defendant was engaged in laying a track on its roadbed near Afton, in St. Louis county, employing for the purpose from seventy-five to eighty men and a train consisting of a locomotive engine and five cars. Two of the cars were used to haul ties, two others Avere loaded with steel rails thirty-three feet in length, and the fifth aauis a pioneer car, on the sides of which were rollers. Over these rollers the rails were pushed from the adjoining car and thence carried to the track. On the back end of this car was a platform considerably lower than the body of the car. On January 5, 1904, plaintiff, then in the employ of the defendant, was directed by Read (the boss) to stand on the platform of the pioneer car and bolt angle-bars on the ends of the rails as they Avere shoved over the rollers from the adjacent car. After the angle-bars were bolted
The specific negligence alleged in the petition is that Reed, the foreman, negligently ordered the train to back over loose ties and unspiked-rails; that as the train was backed it passed over the loose rails and ties and the weight and motion of the train caused a rail to ascend and strike plaintiff’s hand. The evidence shows that the roadbed had been graded and leveled ready for laying the track. The track was laid with broken joints in the following manner: . From nine to ten ties were laid and on these ties and fastened or attached to the abutting rail by the angle-bars, through which, and the rails, four bolts were passed and fastened. The rail was spiked down to the ties and then by order of Reed the train was slowly backed up about one-half the length of the rail (fifteen or sixteen feet) and stopped, and then another rail was laid on the other side of the track in the same manner and the train again hacked up. This process of laying rails continued through the forenoon of each day. In the afternoon the track laid in the forenoon was gone over and the number of ties under each rail doubled and the rails spiked down to them. The defendant’s evidence
Plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the rail which came in contact with plaintiff’s finger was caused to spring up on account of a “high tie” laid fifteen or sixteen feet from the end of the rail, opposite the end that struck plaintiff’s finger; that this “high tie” caused the rail to spring or fly up when the pioneer car was backed on it. The “high tie” was laid by plaintiff’s co-employees and there is no evidence that Beed, the foreman, or any of the employees, noticed that it was “high” until the accident, and there is nothing in the evidence showing that there was anything about the “high tie” to attract attention.
Plaintiff’s finger was amputated at the first joint, no complications set up and it healed in due time.
The jury assessed plaintiff’s damages at one thousand dollars. Pending a motion for new trial, on the suggestion of the trial court, plaintiff remitted five hundred dollars of his recovery, and a judgment was rendered in his favor for five hundred dollars from which defendant appealed in the usual way.
A case somewhat similar to the one in hand is Evansville & Richmond R. R. Co. v. Henderson, 134 Ind.
It was not shown what caused the derailment of the car. In holding that Henderson could not recover, the court, at page 639, said:
“It is an elementary principle of law governing the relation of master and servant, that when a servant enters upon an employment which is, from its nature, necessarily hazardous, the servant assumes the usual risks*403 and perils of the service, and this is especially true as to all those risks which require only the exercise of ordinary observation to malee them apparent. In such cases, there is an implied contract on the part of the servant to take all the risks fairly incident to the service and to waive all right of action against the master for injuries resulting from such hazards.”
Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Jackson, 65 Fed. Rep. 48, is also in point, wherein the lamented Judge Thayer, writing the opinion of the court, said:
“Plaintiff, a section hand in the employ of defendant railway company, was engaged at night, with others, in tearing up and relaying a portion of the railway track which had been undermined by high water in a river near which it ran. While plaintiff and others were carrying a heavy rail, a part of the river bank near by caved in, which caused them to move forward hurriedly, when one of the men stumbled and fell. The others dropped the rail, which fell across a tie, causing one end to fly up and strike the injured plaintiff. Plaintiff claimed that defendant was negligent in not providing sufficient light, and in allowing the ground to be encumbered with the obstruction over which his fellow-workmen stumbled. Held, that, under the circumstances of the work to be done, defendant was not bound to supply a place free from obstructions, to do the work, and that plaintiff assumed the risks attendant upon the obstructed condition of the ground, as well as upon any deficiency of light, which must have been at least as well known to plaintiff as to defendant.”
In Armour v. Hahn, 111 U. S. 313, it was ruled as follows:
*403 “Carpenters, under charge of a foreman, and bricklayers, all employed by the owner through his superintendent, were engaged in the erection of a building, with a cornice supported by sticks of timber passing through the wall (which was thirteen inches thick) and projecting sixteen inches, and to be bricked up at the sides
“An experienced miner, continuing to work under an overhanging rock, with knowledge of the condition of the roof, and further undermining the rock, instead of suspending work and calling in the mine boss to place supports under it, as the rules of the employer required, assumed the risk.
“The rule as to the duty of the master to provide the employee a safe place to work did not apply to an entry room of a mine, which was constantly being changed by the labor performed.”
The duty of a master to furnish a servant with a reasonably safe place to work only applies with all its rigor where the place and its conditions have some permanency and is unshifting. It does not apply where the place is constantly undergoing a change by the very work the servant is engaged in performing, nor where the work requires a repeated and continuous change of the servant’s place to work, as in the work of attaching angle-bars to steel rails on a railroad track under construction. When the rule does not apply, the duty of the master to the servant is fully discharged if he does not place the servant in a discovered position of peril, or in one that might have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary care, which peril is not incident to the business or its duties. The master is not bound to use care to protect the servant from a danger incident to the work or to remove every obstruction that might be