3 Mo. App. 300 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action to recover damages for an injury to the plaintiff, caused, as he alleged, by the negligence of the defendants. The petition charged that the defendants had been guilty of negligence in the construction of a scaffold, which was alleged to be defective, unsafe, and composed of insufficient materials, on which scaffold plaintiff had been ordered to work; that in obedience to the order, and believing the scaffold to be fit and proper, the plaintiff worked upon it, but that, by reason of its unsoundness and the defendants’ negligence, the scaffold gave way and broke, whereby plaintiff was precipitated and fell to the ground, etc. The answer admitted the fall, but denied the other allegations, and charged that the accident was owing to the gross carelessness of the plaintiff. The reply denied any carelessness on the part of the plaintiff’.
The evidence showed that the plaintiff was at work on or about an iron fence around a circular gallery of the furnace of the defendants. The platform or scaffolding on which he was at work consisted of a plank from fourteen to sixteen feet long, fourteen inches wide, and two inches thick, one end of which rested on the floor of an extension of the gallery of the furnace, while the other end was supported by scantlings projecting out from beneath the gallery, and fastened to it by ropes. This plank had an inclination, caused by the fact that the outer scantling — that is, the one farthest from the extension — was six or eight inches lower than the level of the gallery on which the inner end of' the plank rested. The plaintiff testified that on stepping on the plank he found that it did not rest fixedly on the inner scantling, but moved up and down somewhat on that scantling. The platform of the extension of the gallery was iron, and this plank lapped over and rested upon this platform at one end, and extended out over and beyond the outer scantling along the gallery. The purpose of this temporary scaffold was to enable the plaintiff the more readily or-
The plaintiff says : ‘ ‘ The sheet-iron fence was not yet up on the projection b, where the west end of the scaffold lays. When I had worked to the corner of the projection and the east side of the furnace, McQuillen (defendants’ agent) told me to be careful not to leave a hole at that corner, where one could fall through. I got my hammer and chisel to fix the angle-iron, and came around and went onto the scaffold. I got on the scaffold and gave one or two steps, and it went down with me. I don’t know why it gave way. I only know it gave way.” The plaintiff fell to the ground and was very seriously injured. The scantlings which supported the plank did not give way; nor did the plank break. The evidence fails to show why the plank fell, or what was the cause of its falling. The plaintiff’s expressions are : “It was raft plank, and went down under me when I fell.” “ I cannot say whether, when the plank went down under me, it broke off at the sharpened edge on the western projection, or whether it slipped off that edge, or what made it
The plaintiff had nothing to do with placing the scaffold, and did not see it when it was putting up. He found it as it was, when ordered to go to work with the angle-iron by the agent or vice-principal of defendants. He did not, nor did his fellow-workmen, change the plank or do anything to it at any time. There is no testimony tending to show that any one thought it necessary or proper to make any alteration at any time. Plaintiff testifies that he could not do the work he was ordered to do without going out on the scaffold, though he afterwards seems to say he might have done it, only not so conveniently. He was not a scaffold-builder, but was a man familiar with scaffolds, and accustomed to work upon them at great elevations. It appeared that there is no rule for the building of scaffolding; that it is built to conform to particular work and the locality. Upon this evidence the court ruled that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and plaintiff took a nonsuit.
The burden is on the plaintiff in this case to prove negligence on the part of defendants, and that their negligence was the cause of the injury. As it is not contended that there was any defect in the material of this temporary apparatus— there is, at least, no evidence to show such defect — the fault must have been in the arrangement or construction of the appliances. The theory of plaintiff seems to be that the plank slid or worked off from its supports, and that the injury was thus caused. Accordingly,
These suggestions serve to show the difficulties in the way of maintaining the present case. If the evidence proves the effective causes of the falling of the plank, how does it prove them? Not by any direct evidence of negligence, but by raising an inference from facts which are as patent to the plaintiff as- they now are to us. It is a peculiarity of this case that the plaintiff himself observed, before the accident, almost every fact from which his counsel now draws the conclusion that the apparatus was unsafe and insufficient, and from which he deduces the negligence of the defendants. Suppose, for instance, that the same scaffold had been at a point ten feet from the ground, and the work had been doing there, would there have been negligence? Yet the height was a matter perfectly obvious to the plaintiff. He was a skilled workman, accustomed to working upon scaffolding placed at great elevations. No material fact has been discovered that he did not know. He says, indeed, he thought the plank was nailed to the outer stanchion. This was probably an after-thought, produced by the result. The plain inference from the facts is either that he did not think it necessary that the plank should be nailed, or that he never thought, at the time, about the matter at all. On the supposition, however, that this .conclusion was formed before the fall, it amounts to this, that he thought the apparatus safe. But all the grounds on which his conclusion rested were as open to him as to any one; possibly more open to him than to the defendants or their agent, since the testimony shows that,
It is said, in some cases, that the master is responsible for the safety of the apparatus or appliances, and that there' is an implied undertaking on his part to this effect in the contract of hiring. It is difficult to see how this can be, when the basis of the action is negligence. It is obvious that injuries may occur consistently with the exercise, not only of reasonable care and skill on the part of the master, but of the highest degree of diligence. It is held, even where the element of skill and art comes in as against a workman without special skill, that the employer is not bound to exhaustive care or the highest degree of diligence. Wonder v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., 32 Md. 411; Greenleaf v. Illinois Central R. R. Co., 29 Iowa, 14; Whart. on Neg., secs. 212, 213. Even carriers of passengers do not insure their safety ; and the loose expressions in some of the cases must be taken in subordination to the facts before the court. The rule is that the master is bound to use reasonable care in supplying suitable apparatus for the performance of the work required; and is liable for any injury caused by negligence in fulfilling this obligation. Gibson v. Pacific R. R. Co., 46 Mo. 163; Keegan v. Kavanaugh, 62 Mo. 230. The appellant has cited a large number of cases which it is unnecessary to comment upon, because the particular statement of facts above given serves to distinguish the present case from them. The appellant, however, makes an especial point of this, that the court below erred in taking-
This effect does not depend upon anything peculiar to actions involving questions as to negligence, but results from the nature of a demurrer to circumstantial evidence. The court does not, as counsel phrase it, sit as a “ preliminary jury; ” it sits as a court, though it does what juries do, namely, it applies the law to the facts. At common law, in case of a demurrer to circumstantial evidence, the party demurring was obliged to admit, not only every fact, but every conclusion which the evidence conduced to prove, else he could not insist on the jury being discharged, or oblige the party offering the evidence to join in demurrer. Gibson v. Hunter, 2 H. Black. 187, 209, and note a; Cocksedge v. Fanshaw, Doug. 119; Tidd’s Pr. *866. In Gibson v. Hunter, Lord Chief Justice Eyre, delivering the unanimous answer of all the judges in the House of Lords, said : “ But, if the party wishes to withdraw from the jury the application of the law to the fact, and all consideration of what the law is upon the fact, he then demurs on law upon the evidence, and the precise operation of that demurrer is to take from the jury and refer to the judge the application of the law to the fact.” And, in case of a demurrer to the evidence, “the court will,” says Tidd, supra, “if they can,'give judgment upon such evidence, but otherwise a venire de novo must be awarded.” But only such inferences as a jury can legally and reasonably make from the facts in evidence are to be taken as admitted by the demurrer. “The party demurring,” says Chief Justice Marshall, in Pawling v. The United States, 4
In Parks v. Ross, 11 How. 362, on the trial in the court below, the defendant asked and the court gave the instruction that, if the evidence was believed by the jury to be true, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, Mr. Justice Grier, delivering the opinion of the court, said : “ It is undoubtedly the peculiar province of the jury to find all matters of fact, and of the court to decide all questions of law arising thereon. But a jury has no right to assume the truth of any material fact without some evidence legally sufficient to establish it. It is, therefore, error in the court to instruct the jury that they may find a material fact of which there is no evidence from which it may be legally inferred. Hence the practice of granting an instruction like the present, which makes it imperative upon the j ury to find the verdict for the defendant, and which has, in many States, superseded the ancient practice of a demurrer to evidence. It
The action of the court in these cases involves no question as to the weight of evidence, such as is brought up on a motion for a new trial; it settles no question of disputed fact, and passes upon the credibility of no witness. It decides that, in contemplation of law, there is not any evidence to support a verdict; for evidence which is legally insufficient to make out a case is, quoad hoc, no evidence. The section of the statute in regard to the granting of new trials (Wag. St'at. 1058, sec. 4), cited by the plaintiff in error, has no bearing on this question. That section refers to the action of the court after verdict, and has no application to demurrers to evidence. Nor does the purpose or principle apply; for on a demurrer to evidence the court is obliged to give the fullest effect that a jury by any possibility
The judgment of the court below is sustained.