187 Mo. App. 360 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is an appeal by the plaintiff in a personal injury suit, after nonsuit in the trial court.
Plaintiff on January 2, 1913, was in the employ of the defendant as a digger engaged in the construction of a sewer ditch. It was his duty to dig and shovel dirt. He was injured while in the ditch by some dirt and a rock falling back into the excavation.
The petition alleged that plaintiff was so engaged and that it was defendant’s duty to furnish him a reasonably safe place in which to perform his work; that at the time of his injury he was at work in the bottom of the ditch, the top of which was much higher than his head; that while using due diligence and care for his safety, the defendant “so carelessly and neg ligently conducted itself with reference to its duties as to the safety of this plaintiff, as to allow the dirt
The answer was a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence, and a plea of assumption of risk.
Defendant requested and the court refused a peremptory instruction at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, but when the request was renewed at the close of all the evidence the instruction was given. Plaintiff thereupon took a nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside, and the appeal is from the order refusing to set the judgment of nonsuit aside.
The evidence, considered in the light most' favorable to. plaintiff, is as follows:
Plaintiff had worked in sewer ditches for defendant before, as well as top man. At the time of his alleged injury he was working in a section of the ditch about eight or ten feet long and three feet wide. Pie did not know how deep it was, but said he was five feet ten inches in height and that the bank looked to.be
The testimony of defendant’s witneses that is favorable to plaintiff’s case is as follows:
Reece, defendant’s assistant foreman on this job, testified that he had twenty-five or thirty men under him; that rocks that amounted to anything were not thrown up with the dirt but were handed up to the top man and he would carry them off; that it was the top
The president of the defendant company testified: ‘ ‘ The top men are there to wait bn the bottom men, to ' make everything so the bottom men can get the best results. The bottom men are the money makers. The top men are not. They are there to take the dirt away, supply tools, and catch rocks. It isn’t safe for a man to throw a rock up with a shovel. He can’t control it and it might go back in his neighbor’s hole. They pitch them up to the top men. The top man’s duty is to keep the dirt back so that the dirt can be conveniently laid up there. ’ ’
The petition charged a specific act of negligence, to-wit, that defendant allowed dirt and rocks thrown out of the said ditch by plaintiff to collect and accumulate at the edge of the ditch and fall back in said ditch and upon the plaintiff.
Admitting all the evidence introduced by plaintiff to be true, and giving him the' benefit of every reasonable inference to be deduced therefrom, we think the plaintiff is not entitled to recover under the showing made and that the ruling of the learned trial judge was proper.
The evidence wholly fails to show any negligent accumulation of dirt and rocks on top of the bank. Negligence is never presumed. No one, not even the plaintiff, testified that the top man was not there doing his duty, and it cannot be presumed that he was not doing his duty. The plaintiff did not know whether
The case mainly relied on by appellant (Blanton v. Dold, 109 Mo. 64, 18 S. W. 1149) was decided on the res ipsa loquitur doctrine (see page 74). But in our case the charge of negligence was specific; hence the res ipsa loquitur doctrine is not available to strengthen plaintiff’s case.
It is true, negligence is not a fact which is always the subject of direct .proof but may be inferred from facts put in evidence. And while plaintiff’s testimony — “a whole lot of dirt and rock rolled back on
The rule is well settled that if an accident might have resulted from more than one cause, for one of which the master is liable and for the other he is not liable, it is necessary for the plaintiff to prove, in the first instance, that the injury arose from the cause for which the master is liable, for it is not the province of a court or jury to speculate or guess from which cause the accident happened. [Goransson v. Manufacturing Co., 186 Mo. l. c. 307, 85 S. W. 338, and cases cited; Morgan v. Temagami Mining Co., 136 Mo. App. 241, 117 S. W. 90; Caudle v. Kirkbride, 117 Mo. App. 412, 93 S. W. 868.] The plaintiff must show with reasonable certainty that that cause produced the injury. [Thornberry v. Old Judge Mining Co., 126 Mo. App. 660, 105 S. W. 659.] In the case under consideration it is just as probable that plaintiff’s own negligence was the proximate cause of his injury; in other words, his shovel may have struck the bank when he was putting up the shovel full just before the injury in such a way as to overturn it and cause the contents to fall back into the ditch, or, plaintiff may have put several shovels full of dirt in exactly the same spot at the very edge of the bank instead of laying them along the bank in different spots when he knew the top man had to take care of three holes or sections and could not be there to remove every shovel full put up there; and other contingencies might be thought of, any of which would be as consistent with the plaintiff’s account of the occurrence as his conclusion that negligence on the part of his master was the proximate cause of the injury. The mere occurrence of an injury does not necessarily create á liability or warrant an inference of defendant’s negligence. The burden of proof is on the plaintiff to establish, directly or by
Plaintiff does say: “I dug in there and throwed the dirt on top and it accumulated up there and fell back on my shoulder. I threw out a shovel full and went to get another shovel full and a whole lot of dirt and rock rolled back on me.”' There can be no doubt that if plaintiff dug a, hole in the ground eight to ten feet long, three feet wide, and eight to nine feet deep, and had been throwing dirt out on the surface, it would have accumulated up there;” but he must go farther in this action against his master for negligence and show that there was a negligent accumulation up there. His evidence, as hereinbefore detailed, goes no farther than to show an accumulation of dirt on the surface and some dirt and a rock rolling back on -him just after he had thrown up a shovel full, and an injury. This is not sufficient to establish the fact that defendant was negiigent in the manner in which it took care of the dirt on top of the ground.
- There is, however, another reason defeating a recovery by the plaintiff. He and the top man were
The judgment is affirmed.