147 Mo. App. 570 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
Action for damages for personal injuries sustained while plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant. It is averred in the amended petition upon which the case was tried, that plaintiff was at work on a certain iron slab or plate, inserting bolts or spikes into it, for the purpose of having them riveted, the slab being held above the ground by a pulley, operated by the extension of an iron chain over a
The answer was a general denial.
At the trial of the case before the court and jury, there was evidence tending to establish the facts set out in the petition.
Plaintiff is a Greek, entirely unacquainted with the English language, and his fellow-workmen were Greeks or Bulgarians, and the testimony was all given to the court and jury by means of interpreters, so that it is rather difficult to arrive at the exact facts in evidence. Beyond the fact that the plaintiff was injured in the foot by the falling of this iron beam upon it while he was at work, there is nothing in the record to show what the injury consisted of, as the plaintiff and the interpreter do not appear to have been able to describe it in words, but it does appear that during the progress of the trial, plaintiff took off his shoe and sock and exhibited the injured foot to the jury. It was further in evidence that before the injury plaintiff was earning from $1.50 to $2 a day and that he had not worked since down to the time of the trial. There was some evidence in the case tending to show actual knowledge or such continuance of the condition as to constructively charge defendant with knowledge of the
At the close of the testimony defendant asked, a peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer which the court refused, defendant excepting. Of its own motion the court gave an instruction to the effect that if the jury, found that plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant as a laborer at its car shops in the city of Madison, Illinois, where the injury occurred, and that on the day of the alleged injury it was a part of his duty to use a certain pulley operated 'bv a certain iron link chain, running over a cogwheel, and if they found that that was the appliance furnished to him by his employer and used in the work in which he was engaged, and that the iron slab described in the evidence fell upon and injured plaintiff, and if they believed that the slab was caused to fall by reason of the fact that the cogs on the cogwheel over which the iron link chain passed, were worn in such a manner as to cause the chain to slip and fail to catch in the links as the chain passed over the cogwheel, and if they found that the defective condition of the wheel was known or by the exercise of ordinary care might have been known to the defendant, and that at the time plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, they should find for plaintiff, the court further instructing the jury that it was the duty of the master to use ordinary care to furnish his servants a reasonably safe place to work and furnish him with rea
There was a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $750', the verdict being signed by nine of the jurors. After a motion for new trial defendant duly appealed to this court.
The assignments of error are that the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrer to the evidence and that it erred in giving an improper instruction on the measure of damages at the request of plaintiff.
We have read all the evidence in the case as pre
The objection to the instruction as to the measure of damages is more serious. As before noted, the jury had before them ocular demonstration of the extent of the injury, they were the triers of fact as to the extent, duration and probable pain and suffering which would directly result from such an injury, and the compensation he should receive therefor, subject, of
The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly affirmed.