129 Mo. App. 556 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Plaintiff was in the employment of defendant as a teamster. He was injured while in that employment. He claims the injury was caused by defendant’s negligence and brought this action in which he recovered judgment in the trial court.
Since the verdict was for the plaintiff, we will regard all the substantial evidence in his behalf as established in fact, and dispose of the case on that basis. He testified that he was sixty-two years of age and had been a teamster for forty years. At the time of his injury he was hauling dirt for defendant, and had been, for several weeks. He used two wagons, one his own and the other was defendaot’s, and he would haul one load away while the empty one was being filled and then return for the latter. When hurt he was hauling a load with defendant’s wagon. This wagon had a defect in that the “hammer strap” was not bolted or otherwise securely fastened to the tongue or pole of the wagon. A hammer strap was stated to be an iron strap a few inches long, with hole for a bolt at either end. On one end the bolt would run through the strap, through the double-trees and one through the tongue, the strap bending downward back towards the other end, a smaller bolt would run through the strap and
He stated that be knew tbe Avire was liable to give way any moment in pulling up tbe incline where he was hurt. He knew that by sitting down on the load there was no danger if it broke, but that by standing-up there was danger of being dragged off tbe wagon by tbe sudden forward movement of tbe horses pulling the lines; but that if be would let go of tbe lines, even when standing on tbe load, be would be safe.
We thus have for a complainant a man of mature age and forty years experience as a teamster, necessarily with as full knowledge of a wagon, its gearing and its use, as any one could obtain. We have him AVitb full knowledge of tbe defect in tbe contrivance to bold tbe double-trees and of tbe danger in using- it. But more than that, while be knew of tbe liability of the wire to give way at any moment, be knew that to stand on the load was to put himself in the way of injury, when by sitting down he would be safe. But to add to what seems to have been entire indifference to‘danger, be not only stood up, but be bad tbe lines wrapped around his hands, so that if tbe double-trees gave way and the horses “went forward like a flash” as he expressed it, he necessarily would be jerked off tbe wagon. He stated that if he bad merely held tbe lines, though standing up, he could let go and probably Avould not get hurt. He admitted that be did not think of the matter of Avrapping tbe lines around his hands, else be would not have done it.
It Avould be extremely hazardous to tbe employer
In Blundell v. Manufacturing Co., 189 Mo. 552, 562, it is said that a laborer “w'ho uses agricultural instruments while at work upon a farm o.r in a garden, or one who is employed in any service not requiring great skill and judgment and who uses the ordinary tools employed in such work, to which he is accustomed and in regard to which he has perfect knowledge, can hardly be said to have a claim against his employer for negligence, if in using a utensil, which he knows to he defective, he is accidentally injured. It does not rest with the servant to say that the master has superior knowledge and has thereby imposed upon him. He fully comprehends that the instrument which he employs is not perfect, and if he is thereby injured it is by reason of his own fault and negligence. The fact that he notified, the master of the defect and asked for another instrument, and the master promised to furnish the same, in such a case, does not render the master responsible if an accident occurs.”
In discussing this subject the Supreme Court said “Treating it as a question of contributory negligence the rule of law is that if the danger arising from the master’s negligent act is so obvious that the servant, considering his capacity and opportunity, must have known and realized its degree, the court would declare his act of so continuing in his work contributory negligence as a matter of law, but if the peril was not so obvious, if the danger was such as to make it a question whether or not the servant, considering his capacity and opportunity of judging, might reasonably expect that
It is true that at one part of his testimony he said that he thought he could use the wagon safely. But that was a mere formal statement. His whole evidence shows that it was not true. It shows that he was not relying on any promise to remedy the defect, and his mere statement of a condition of mind ought not to control what patently appears otherwise. “If a certain state of mind is in issue, to allow a case to pass off on the mere ipse dixit of the person, that his mind was thus or so, would be to allow him to decide the case for himself, and the court and jury would have nothing to do but to enter a verdict.” [Knorpp v. Wagner, 195 Mo. 637, 665.] As bearing, in some particulars of fact as well as law, on the case at bar, we refer also to a case in this court: Hicks v. Railway, 46 Mo. App. 304.
We think defendant’s demurrer should have been sustained. We regard the judgment as without legal support and hence order that it be reversed.