138 Mo. App. 432 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
— This action is for personal injury. Defendant was the owner of a lumber yard and in the prosecution of the business was engaged in the hauling of large loads of lumber from the yard, the plaintiff being one of his teamsters. On the forenoon of the 7th of April he was driving a gentle team with a large load of lumber out of the yard and in doing so it was necessary to drive under a shed and out at an opening. The joist at the point in controversy supporting the roof of the shed, was eight feet and six inches above the ground. The top of the load of lumber was seven feet and three inches above the ground, leaving a space of fifteen inches between the top of the load and the joist where the wagon should pass out from under the shed. Plaintiff was sitting on top of the load. Before starting he made inquiry of the foreman if he could get through safely and was told “Yes, go ahead. There’s men on bigger and higher loads than that that have driven through there hundreds of times.” He then drove under the west end of the shed, but, as stated by him, the ground rises a little approaching the east end, “and as I drove under the east end of the shed I stooped to get under; I stooped as low as I could, and the joist or cross beam caught me at the back of the neck and shoulders and crushed my back.”
The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence and plaintiff has brought the case here.
Besides, notwithstanding an assurance of safety, the servant must not abandon all exercise of common sense and prudence. The situation in which plaintiff found himself did not involve a question of expert knowledge, or of superior knowledge of the foreman. As he came to the low place he was in position to exercise better knowledge that the foreman had. We could well say here as was remarked by Judge Lamm in Knorpp v. Wagner, 195 Mo. 1. c. 666, that “In pleading plaintiff's ignorance and defendant’s knowledge, the learned counsel for respondent (appellant) doubtless
We think the judgment should undoubtedly be affirmed.