123 Mo. App. 192 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
This plaintiff is the widow of Patrick Naughton, deceased. While removing ashes from under a boiler in defendant’s gas factory her husband was
The assignments of negligence in the petition are failure to instruct Naughton as to the construction of the boiler and ash pit and the condition of the ashes therein; failing to light the ash pit and the space thereabouts ; failing to provide it with a hole or drum through which ashes could be removed without danger to employees; failing to supply tools and appliances by which the ashes could be removed without danger to employees; failing to provide suitable boards or other appliances on which to stand while removing the ashes and negligently ordering Naughton to work in a place known to be dangerous. The petition further avers that Naughton was not experienced in the work he was ordered to do, or acquainted with defendant’s boilers and ash pits, or with the danger of working in the pit; all of which facts the defendant company knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known. Defendant’s answer was a denial of the allegations of the petition, a general plea of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased, without saying what negligence of his contributed to the casualty, and the further plea that all the surroundings amidst which Naughton was working were open and obvious and whatever danger existed in working there was known, or could have been known to him by ordinary care, and he assumed the risk of the work.
We think the statement of facts sufficiently answers the contention that plaintiff failed to make a prima facie case, and demonstrates that there is no merit in the assignment of error based on the refusal of the court below to direct a nonsuit on the ground of lack of evidence of negligence on the part of defendant, or that deceased was shown conclusively to have assumed the risk of the injury he suffered, or to have contributed to it by his own negligence. There is but slight if any, evidence that
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.