130 Mo. App. 128 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This is an action for damages for a personal injury received by the" plaintiff while working for the defendant in its mill or factory. In said establishment are manufactured sucker rods and other supplies made of wood for use in working oil wells. In the factory logs were sawed into boards or slabs from one and a half to three inches thick and of varying; lengths of from thirty-two feet to eighteen feet, or less.. As these hoards were taken from the saw they were piled. on stationary skids leading from the saw carriage to ai machine called an edger on the same floor and some distance away. The use of the edger was to cut the boards into square strips one and a half to three inches in their dimensions. After these strips had been run through a finishing machine, they are ready for use in the oil wells. Plaintiff’s main work was off-bearing the rods after they were finished, or at the edging machine. But when he was hired he was told by Maddox, the superintendent of all the men on the floor, that he would, be under the direction of Dallas Austin, who was foreman of the edging machine gang and had principal
It is contended for defendant the evidence in the. present record is materially different from what it was before, but we do not accept this view. An attentive perusal of the record has convinced us the evidence now lacking which was before us on the previous appeal, has no bearing on the questions to be determined. In the
It is further contended tbe specific act of negligence alleged in plaintiff’s petition remained unproved. As said, tbe only act of negligence on tbe part of defendant left to tbe jury was regarding tbe careless piling of tbe lumber. Negligence in this regard was averred in- tbe petition and we have beld was established.
Counsel say tbe main instruction given for plaintiff failed to limit tbe issue of negligence to tbe specific negligence pleaded. Tbe instruction submitted tbe case on much narrower issues than were joined in tbe pleading; for, as stated, it limited tbe recovery to a finding of carelessness in piling tbe lumber under tbe direction of the superintendent.
It is further complained tbe instruction did not advise the jury as to what would constitute negligence in stacking tbe lumber. As to this point tbe jury were told if it was carelessly stacked and so high it was liable to fall at any time, and on that account was dangerous to defendant’s employees, such conduct was negligence. To pile ponderous boards in high stacks, so insecurely arranged they were liable, to topple over on men who were compelled to work about them, was surely a failure to use ordinary care for tbe safety of tbe men.
Complaint is made of tbe first instruction because it allowed recovery if tbe stack was dangerous in any degree; whereas defendant’s duty was only to make it reasonably safe. Tbe instruction will not bear the meaning defendant’s counsel seek to fasten on it, to-wit: that if tbe stack was slightly dangerous, though reasonably safe, still plaintiff was entitled to a verdict. Tbe charge made tbe issue of defendant’s negligence turn on whether or not tbe stack was carelessly built so high and in such a manner it was liable to fall at any time and on that account was dangerous to employees. But tbe jury were required to find not only that tbe stack
The first instruction for plaintiff is said to assume the men who worked at the saw and the men who'worked at the edger were not fellow-servants. We fail to see the cogency of this argument. As we have said repeatedly, the ground of recovery left to plaintiff in his instruction was a finding of negligence on the part of Maddox, and no one will contend Maddox, who was empowered to hire and discharge men and exercise control over the entire force at work on the floor, was a fellow-servant of plaintiff.
It is insisted the falling of the stack of lumber was due to the negligence of the workmen and plaintiff could not recover. Counsel press this question on the court in the face of the evidence that Maddox had this very stack of lumber piled under his supervision. It is true sometimes his directions were not followed in stacking the lumber. Counsel surely are not serious in asking this court to hold as a matter of law on such contradictory evidence, that the cause of the injury was the careless act of a fellow servant. Counsel ignore or forget the positive testimony regarding Maddox’s connection with the stacking of the lumber which hurt plaintiff.
Though we feel the burden ought not to have been imposed on us, in view of the care given to the former
The judgment is affirmed.