70 Mo. App. 190 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
The petition alleged as acts of negligence, first, the furnishing an unsafe machine, and, second, the negligence of Hack, the foreman, in directing the manner of its use. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $2,000, and defendant appealed.
I. The errors assigned relate to the giving of alleged improper, and the refusal of proper, instructions ; and that the defendant was prejudiced by certain statements made by plaintiff’s counsel in his closing argument to the jury. A careful examination forces the conclusion that none of these objections are well taken.
The specific objection is that this instruction assumes an issuable fact, to wit, that the derrick was a dangerous machine. If attention is given alone to the instruction just quoted then it might be treated as assuming the controverted fact that the machine was a dangerous appliance. But when the court’s instructions are all read and considered as one charge there could be no danger of a misapprehension or that the jury could understand that such fact was conceded. Plaintiff’s third instruction put that question fairly before the jury, and they were advised that to entitle plaintiff to recover they (the jury) should believe from the evidence that “the defendant and its foreman who had charge of its business negligently and without reasonable care furnished plaintiff and his fellow workmen with an unsafe and dangerous machine or battering ram to work, with,” etc.
“3. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that after the striking of the blows had begun, the plaintiff was lifted off his feet several times and sawthat the derrick was rocking and moving, and saw that he was in a dangerous position, then it was his duty to have changed his position, or used such care as would have been used by an ordinary prudent person under like circumstances, and if he failed to do so then he was guilty of negligence, and the verdict must be for the defendant.”
In addition to this, the plaintiff’s third instruction, in effect, told the jury that plaintiff must at the time, in order to recover, have been without fault or negligence on his part — im other words, have exercised ordinary care. And by another instruction the court defined “negligence as used in these instructions-to mean a lack of such care as reasonable, prudent, careful persons usually exercise on like occasions under like circumstances.” And by the fifth instruction given at plaintiff’s request, and which we have heretofore quoted, the jury were fairly advised that plaintiff had no right to recover if he knew of the dangerous character of the machine or could have so known by the exercise of ordinary care, unless however he was assured by the foreman of its safety and ordered to use the same, provided of course the machine was not so glaringly dangerous that a man of ordinary prudence would not handle it.
Now, in the light of these several declarations by the court, the jury must have understood that plaintiff’s knowledge, or such means of knowledge as were obvi
Since we find no prejudicial error in the record, the judgment must be affirmed.