98 Mo. App. 546 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received in consequence of defendant’s negligence while in its employ. The answer was a general- denial and that plaintiff’s injuries were caused by his own negligence, and that he assumed the risk.
The evidence in the case discloses the following state of facts: The Falk Company, a corporation of Milwaukee-, Wisconsin, the appellant, herein, was on the 9th day of May, 1900, and prior thereto, engaged in the reconstruction of the double tracks of the- Metropolitan Street Railway Company at the intersection of Eighth street and Grand avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, Eighth
It is not denied, in fact all the evidence goes to show, that defendant’s foreman knew that the metal covering for said pulley hole was not on at the time of the accident. Plaintiff stated that he could have'seen the exposed opehing if he had been looking for it and had not the shadow of foreman Krebbs, who was near at the time, prevented the light from disclosing it; that he noticed it looked dark hut did not think it was uncovered. It was shown that in the work of reconstruction and moving the track it was necessary to excavate
The following diagram used at the trial will assist materially in an understanding of the case:
The defendant contends that the risk that attended plaintiff’s employment was a result of and brought about by the necessities of the work itself, and for that reason the rule of law requiring the master to provide a reasonably safe place for the servant while in the performance of his labor, has no application. As we understand it, that is only equivalent to saying that the servant assumed the risk of his employment.' But as there was evidence tending to show, at least, that the course plaintiff followed, when he undertook to obey the direction of his foreman, was the one most available and which had been used as such by defendant’s employees, it became the duty of defendant to have exercised the necessary care to have rendered it as reasonably safe as the condition of the work at the time would permit. If the replacing of the track had been completed it became the duty of the defendant, under the evidence, to have covered said pulleys in order to secure the safety of its employees. But if the replacing of the track had not been completed, and the time had not arrived for the said covers to be replaced, and the necessities of the work required that they should be kept open, then defendant was not guilty of negligence in that respect.
"We do not, therefore, agree with defendant that plaintiff was not entitled to recover under the proof. But it follows that if we are correct in the foregoing conclusion as to the issue raised by the evidence, its objection to plaintiff’s first instruction should have been sustained. Said instruction is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that on the 9th day of May, 1900, the plaintiff was employed by defendant as a common laborer in and about the reconstruction of certain street railway tracks at Eighth and Grand avenue, in Kansas City, Missouri, and that while in the perform
The vice of said instruction consists in assuming that the knowledge of defendant that the pulley hole in question was left uncovered was negligence. It may or may not have been negligence. If the work of relaying the track at the point of injury had been completed, as has been said, it then became the duty of defendant to have had them covered; but if the relaying of the track had not been completed, .and it was necessary to the work to. have them uncovered, the defendant was not guilty of negligence. It was a question for the jury and not for the court. It was not a question of law upon undisputed facts, but a question of both law and fact.
Instruction number two given for plaintiff should have been modified to suit the case. "We think it was error to tell the jury without qualification that it was the duty of the defendant “to exercise ordinary and reasonable care to provide a reasonably safe place for the plaintiff to do the work he was directed to perform. ’ ’ In requiring the defendant to provide & reasonably safe
Plaintiff’s other instructions seem to be unexceptionable.
For the reason given the cause is reversed and remanded.