11 Mo. App. 199 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action by a servant to recover damages from his master for an injury alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the latter. On December 15, 1879, the defendant was proprietor of an establishment in St. Louis in which was carried on the manufacture of candles, soap, and oil. In carrying on this business he had in his works a tank, in which, as we understand the testimony, the render
The plaintiff was employed by the defendant as engineer, at a salary of $15 a week. As such it was his duty to superintend the steam boiler and. connecting pipes, and the process of filling and emptying the inner tank or vat. He
At the date of the accident he had been in the employ of the defendant about three months, and prior to that time he had had but one occasion to go down into this outer annular space for the purpose of repairing the outer tank, which was about a month before. He had never inspected the platform, though he had observed that the ladders were unsafe, and had requested the carpenter to make new ones.
At the date of the accident a leak had been discovered in the outer tank; it was allowed to cool down over Sunday, and early on Monday morning the plaintiff and Mr. Grroll, the fireman, went down for the purpose of repairing it.
Before considering the instructions given and refused, we may recur to the law governing cases of this kind, as laid down by the supreme court in its most recently reported decisions on the subject. It is there laid down in substance, that a master owes a duty to his servant to exercise reasonable care, to the end that the machinery, structures, and appliances with which the servant has to do are as safe as is consistent with the end for which such machinery is intended, and with the state of improvement in the particular department of industry; that the master and servant are not under an equal duty in this regard, and that ‘ ‘ the servant has a right to assume that the machinery or implements furnished him by the employer are' safe and suitable for the business, and he is not, while the master is, required to
Tested by these principles, let us examine the instructions given and refused. At the close of the plaintiff’s .case, the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover, and this was refused. It cannot for a moment be contended that there was error in this. Nor is it at all necessary to enlarge upon this point. Upon the plaintiff’s evidence there was clearly a case for the jury.
At the close of the whole case, the learned judge gave the following instructions, at the instance of the plaintiff:
“ 1. If the jury find for plaintiff, they will assess his damages at such sum as they may think just and proper,*205 upon the evidence in the case, not to exceed the sum of $20,000.
“2. If the jury believe from the evidence that on or about December 15, 1879, defendant, either himself in person or by his authorized agent, requested the plaintiff to go down into the cistern or well of the defendant’s soap factory, in the discharge of his duty as engineer, and that the wooden platform upon which the ladders facilitated the descent into said cistern or well alongside of an iron tank was at the time rotten, decayed, and defective, and that defendant had carelessly or negligently permitted the same to become unsafe, rotten, decayed, and defective in strength, and that defendant knew of, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have known of and remedied such platform, and rendered the same reasonably safe, and shall further find from the evidence that he neglected to do so, and that by reason of such neglect on the part of defendant, the plaintiff sustained the injuries complained of, without any fault of plaintiff, or any negligence of plaintiff which contributed directly and proximately to the disaster to him, then the verdict of the jury should be for the plaintiff.”
The court also gave the following instructions, at the instance of the defendant: —
“ 1. If the jury find from the evidence that it was a part of the duty of plaintiff, as engineer in the factory of defendant, to superintend, control, keep in repair, or manage the iron tank mentioned in the petition; that in the performance of this duty he had occasion to make use of the platform mentioned in the petition; that said platform was entirely hidden from all persons except those whose duties called them into the well, around said tank, and could only be seen by the use of a candle, the jury is instructed that it was the duty of the plaintiff to keep said platform in a safe condition ; and if the jury find from the evidence that plaintiff, having seen in said platform any rottenness, decay, or defect which occasioned the injury complained of, neglected*206 to repair the same; or if the jury find from the evidence that plaintiff did not know of any rottenness, decay, or defect in said platform from neglect on his part to examine and inspect the same, they will find for the defendant, even though they should find from the evidence that the injury complained of resulted from the rottenness, decay, and defect of said platform.
“2. If the jury find from the evidence that it was a part of plaintiff’s employment, as engineer at defendant’s factory, to keep in repair the platform and ladders mentioned in the petition, they will find for defendant.”
The defendant then asked the court to give the following instructions, all of which were refused: —
“3. If the jury believe from the evidence that A. S. W. Goodwin was the superintendent of defendant’s factory, and that plaintiff was subject to said Goodwin’s orders in the discharge of his duties, as stated in the petition, and that the injury complained of resulted from any neglect on the. part of said Goodwin, as such superintendent, in seeing that the platform mentioned in the petition was kept in repair, then the jury is instructed that plaintiff cannot recover, unless they further find from the evidence that defendant, knowing, or having reason to know, that Mr. Goodwin was an unfit, incompetent, or negligent superintendent, continued to keep him in his employ.
“4. If the jury find from the evidence that plaintiff was-injured by reason of any rottenness, decay, or defect of the platform or ladders mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, they will find for defendant, unless they further find that defendant had notice of such rottenness, decay, or defect, and neglected to repair the same after such notice.
“5. The jury are instructed that, under the evidence in this case, if the jury believe the same to be true, their verdict should be for the defendant.”
The plaintiff’s instructions were both correct in point of law and correct as applicable to the facts of the case, though
The instructions asked for the defendant were, all of them except the second, the one given as well as the ones refused, erroneous in point of law. The first one had the effect of telling the jury that if the plaintiff was required, in the discharge of his duty as engineer, to go upon the platform, it was his duty to keep the same in a safe condition. There is no rule of law from which such a deduction can be made, and it is in direct conflict with the doctrine of the supreme court as laid down in the case of Porter v. Railroad Company, above quoted. The court could no more tell the jury, as matter of law, that if the plaintiff had occasion to go upon the platform in the discharge of his duty, it was incumbent upon him to attend to its safety, than he could have told them, if the plaintiff had been injured by the roof of his engine-house falling in, that if he was required to stand under the roof in the discharge of his duty, it was incumbent upon him to keep the roof in repair. Whether, under the circumstances of this case, it Avas incumbent upon the plaintiff to keep this platform in repair, was a question of fact for the jury, to be deduced from the evidence, and the court could not properly instruct the jury to find that such was the fact, from the mere fact that it was the duty of the plaintiff to go upon the platform. Roberts v. Smith, 2 Hurl. & N. 213; Williams v. Clough, 3 Hurl. & N. 259. An engineer or machinist does not, by going upon a scaffolding which is a part of the permanent structure of the place where he is employed, assume the risk of its safety ; but, on the other hand, he may rightfully trust to the providence of his master in this regard. In view of this instruction, it is difficult to see how the jury could have found for the plaintiff, or how the learned judge came to refuse the motion for a new trial, unless he after-wards , on further consideration, concluded that the instruction was not sound. If the verdict had been for the defendant,
The third instruction asked for by the defendant, and refused, was also erroneous in law. The law is exactly the other way. The instruction would entirely abolish the rule of respondeat superior. If Mr. Goodwin and the plaintiff had been fellow-servants engaged in the same common employment, then the instruction would have been correct. But they were not. Mr. Goodwin was the vice-principal of the defendant, in entire charge of the establishment, and exercising all the authority .and discretion, even to the employing of the hands, that could be exercised by the defendant. Under such circumstances, Mr. Goodwin’s negligence, if such there were, was the defendant’s negligence, and the. case stands in exactly the same plight as if Mr. Goodwin had not been there at all, but the defendant had been managing the establishment himself. Siegrist v. Arnot, 10 Mo. App. 197; Gormly v. Iron Works, 61 Mo. 942; Brothers v. Cartter, 52 Mo. 372; Devany v. Iron Works, 4 Mo. App. 236; Stoddard v. Railroad Co., 65 Mo. 514; Mullan v. Railroad Co., 78 Pa. St. 25, 32; Malone v. Hathaway, 64 N. Y. 5; Whart. on Neg., sect. 229.
The next instruction asked for by the defendant, and refused, was contrary to well-settled principles of law as laid down in the case of Porter v. Railroad Company, already cited, and in many other cases. It is a general rule of law, that where knowledge is essential to charge a person, negligent ignorance is the same as actual knowledge. 2 Thomp. on Neg. 994, and cases there cited; Gibson v. Railroad Co., 46 Mo. 163. “ It is the master’s duty,” said Lord Cranworth in a leading case, “to be careful that
The last instruction refused need not be discussed. There was no case -for a peremptory instruction against the plaintiff. There was what the books term “ evidence of negligence ” to go to the jury, and we have no power to revise their finding. Their verdict, on the argument, was conceded to have been a small compensation for the injury actually suffered. No doubt the humane conduct of the defendant, and of Mr. Goodwin, towards the plaintiff, influenced the jury in placing the quantum of damages at what must, in the light of many other verdicts, be considered a low figure. The evidence showed that the defendant, acting through, and on the advice of Mr. Goodwin, procured for the plaintiff the best surgical attendance to be had in the city; that he not only paid for this, but that he paid the wages of the plaintiff down to the time of the bringing of this suit; that he purchased for him an artificial leg, and that he offered to take him back into his employ, giving him light work and paying him the same wages he had before had. Certainly this conduct is to be highly commended, and the conduct of the plaintiff, as compared with it, does not stand in so favoi-able a light. But these circumstances cannot in any way influence the plaintiff’s legal rights, or the defendant’s legal liability; and we cannot look to them in any way in making up our judgment in the case.
It remains to consider jtwo exceptions to rulings upon questions of evidence. During the progress of the trial, the learned judge permitted the. plaintiff’s counsel to ask the plaintiff, when testifying as a witness, several leading questions, on the ground, which is apparent from the testimony as preserved, that the plaintiff had a very imperfect knowledge of the English language. To permit leading
A witness, Brown, had testified that he had brought up pieces of botton wood from the bottom of the well soon after the accident happened. The plaintiff, on the witness-stand, was asked the following question : ‘ ‘ Did you look at any portion of the wood on that platform — that is, did you examine the condition of the wood after you fell? ” and the plaintiff answered : “ No ; but two days afterward a fireman by the name of Brown showed me some.” And in answer to another question he stated that this was the same Brown who had been on the witness-stand. This testimony was objected to on the ground that it was hearsay, and the objection was overruled. Undoubtedly this ruling was technically erroneous ; but we see no substantial prejudice in it. The plaintiff did not say what kind of wood it was, whether it was sound wood or rotten wood. At most it had a tendency to corroborate Brown’s story about bringing up rotten pieces of wood from the bottom of the well; but this story could not have had any material influence upon the verdict; for the evidence on the part of the defendant tended to show that pieces of wood had been left in the bottom of the well from former repairs, and that they had become more or less decayed by water and heat. This whole story of the rotten wood might be left out of the testimony without materially affecting the plaintiff’s case; for it still would appear that this platform was of pine wood ; that it fell with the weight of the plaintiff, another
The judgment is accordingly affirmed.