78 Mo. App. 144 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
The defendant questions the judgment on the ground that the denial by the court of its demurrer to the evidence was error. It is contended by the defendant that the facts which the evidence tends to prove and the inferences to be drawn therefrom are insufficient to establish a prima facie case, entitling the plaintiff to a submission to the jury. In support of this contention it is argued that it is not disclosed by the evidence that the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of the defendant.
The defendant further objects that there is a substantial variance between the negligence alleged and that proved. The petition alleges the negligence of the defendant in this way:
The relation of the plaintiff to the defendant at the time of injury is sufficiently alleged in the petition. The law did not require the plaintiff to plead the defendant’s legal duty to her. The facts pleaded and proved showed a breach on the part of defendant of a legal duty. It is distinctly alleged that while the plaintiff was in the employment of the defendant she was required by him to work in a place that was rendered unsafe and dangerous by reason of the negligent acts and doings of the men engaged in repairing the defendant’s factory building, in consequence of which she was injured. But whether this constituted a breach of defendant’s duty was a conclusion of law which plaintiff was not required to plead. Abbott’s Plead., p. 258; Pier v. Heinrichoffen, 52 Mo. 333; McNees v. Ins. Co., 61 Mo. App. 335; Field v. Railway, 76 Mo. 614. It seems to us that there was a sufficient correspondence between the allegation and proof to meet the requirements of our practice act.
But aside from this it is to be observed that the defendant’s foreman Mains was present during the progress of the work. The defendant was, in the eye of the law, present itself and can not, under such circumstances, be heard to say it did not know that the place had been rendered unsafe. On the other hand, the evidence does not tend to show that the plaintiff had the same knowledge that the defendant had of the unsafety of the place. The drum had been placed in the dangerous position but a few minutes before it fell and injured plaintiff. The plaintiff was during the intervening time occupied with her work, sitting with her back to the drums, and unconscious of her peril. Her opportunity and means of acquiring knowledge of the danger was by no means equal to that of defendant. There is nothing in the evidence to charge her with knowledge that the place had become more unsafe. It is true that Mains testified that he ordered the plaintiff to remove to another place to work, but this was contradicted by the testimony of
The defendant objects that the first instruction given for the plaintiff is erroneous; it told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant on or about February 11, 1896, that on said day while working in defendant’s building in the place assigned her by the foreman of defendant in charge of the department in which she was employed, a pillar, which was being used by workmen employed by a contractor, who had a contract with defendant to shore up said building, fell and struck plaintiff, thereby injuring her, and if you further find that the fall of said pillar was owing to its being insecurely and improperly erected and that said workmen did not use ordinary care and caution in erecting said pillar, and you further believe that plaintiff might reasonably have supposed that she could safely work at the place where she was required to work, and that defendant knew or by the exercise of reasonable care could have known that it was not safe for plaintiff to work there, then they should find for the plaintiff. The first ground of defendant’s objection to this instruction is that it permits a recovery on a cause of action other than that stated in the petition. This objection is perhaps sufficiently answered by Avhat has already been said in respect to the correspondence between the allegata and the probata. The defendant’s contention, it seems to us, is founded on a misconception of the language of the petition. The actionable facts are all there. The instruction in theory is not variant from that of the petition.
The defendant further objects that the court erred in its action refusing its instructions 18 and 21. These two instructions but express the rule relating to the assumption of the risk which had been sufficiently expressed in other instructions given for defendant.
There were twenty-six instructions requested — twenty-two of these by defendant. Of these the court gave two with and nine without modification. These presented every conceivable phase of the case for the defendant. Some of them were liberal to a fault. It would be strange if one or more of these were not subject to some slight verbal criti