179 Mo. App. 456 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is an action by plaintiff for personal injuries received by him while in the employ of the defendant. The suit was instituted before a justice of the peace, where plaintiff had judgment. TJpon appeal to the circuit court, and a trial de novo there, plaintiff again prevailed, and the defendant has appealed to this court.
The statement filed before the justice of the peace avers, in substance, that upon the date in question, while plaintiff was in defendant’s employ, the latter’s foreman ordered plaintiff to assist him in letting down a large, heavy iron gate or apron, used to regulate the supply of coal in the boiler room of defendant’s ice plant in and about which plaintiff was employed; that while so engaged, under the direction of the foreman, the latter negligently lowered one side of said gate or apron, without warning to plaintiff, etc., whereby plaintiff’s right hand was caught and injured.
The evidence discloses that plaintiff’s duties, as a servant of defendant, were entirely separate and apart from anything pertaining to the gate or apron in question, and that he had never had anything to do with the latter except upon the occasion when he was injured. It is not altogether clear from the testimony just what was the character of this applicance, but it
It appears that defendant’s foreman, one Fuqua, called to plaintiff to assist him in letting down this gate or apron, which it is said was quite heavy; that the foreman had hold of a hook at one end of the appliance, and directed plaintiff to raise a like hook at the other end thereof, and assist in letting the apron down. It seems that plaintiff undertook to do this, but did not succeed in getting his end unhooked before the foreman let down the other end, whereby plaintiff’s hand was in some manner caught in or under the apron and injured.
I. It is urged that the evidence adduced was insufficient to take the case to the jury, and that appellant’s demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. Appellant’s argument on this score is based upon the theory that the evidence showed that plaintiff and Fuqua were, at the time, engaged in performing common labor, and that Fuqua’s act in prematurely letting down his end of the apron was the mere negligence of a fellow servant, for which there could be no recovery. And in support of appellant’s position in this regard we are cited to the rulings in English v. Shoe Co., 145 Mo. App. 439, 122 S. W. 747; Rodgers v. Schiele, 148 Mo. App. 53, 127 S. W. 618; Dickinson v. Jenkins, 144 Mo. App. 133, 128 S. W. 280; Stephens v. Lumber Co., 110 Mo. App. 398, 86 S. W. 481.
But we are not persuaded that the evidence adduced failed to show any right of recovery by plaintiff. It is quite true that “the doctrine is firmly established in this State, with respect to the master’s liability asserted on the grounds of negligence in a servant occupying a dual capacity, to the effect that it is
The situation here was not such as was presented in the above mentioned cases upon which appellant relies. In English v. Shoe Co., supra, the injured servant and defendant’s foreman regularly performed duties of a like character in working at a certain machine — though aside from such duties the foreman had certain authority over plaintiff and other employees. There the plaintiff’s injury was caused purely by a negligent act of the foreman while working as a co-laborer with plaintiff at the machine in question, and it was held that no exercise of any authority on his part in any way intervened.
In Rodgers v. Schiele, supra, the foreman and the injured servant reguarly worked together in cleaning certain brass plates, and it was held that the foreman’s act in letting such a plate fall, whereby the servant assisting him was injured, was the act of a fellow servant and did not cast liability upon the master.
In Dickinson v. Jenkins, supra, a servant was injured by the fall of a timber from a pile of lumber, such fall resulting from the manner of piling the same. It appears that the method adopted was one in common use by the servant and his coemployees. The foreman, as a part of his usual duties, assisted in building the pile. It was held that the foreman’s act in the premises was one of a fellow-servant, and plaintiff
In Stephens v. Lumber Co., supra, the servant was injured while unloading lumber from a car. It appears that the employee who was assisting with this work and whose negligence in. prematurely releasing his end of a beam it is said caused the injury, was a traveling salesman for the master, who had been temporarily pressed into service to aid in the work of unloading cars. It was sought to show that he was in fact a foreman. Nevertheless it appeared that the work which both were performing at the time was mere common labor, and as plaintiff’s injury was occasioned by the negligence of a fellow servant, he was not permitted to recover.
None of these cases are authority for denying a recovery to plaintiff in the instant case; nor are other cases of like character to which we might refer. The cause of action is very informally alleged in the statement filed, and the testimony respecting the pertinent facts is somewhat meagre. Nevertheless, it appears that the evidence tended to establish a cause of action in plaintiff’s favor, and which proceeds upon the theory that it was negligence on the part of the foreman to order plaintiff to assist in lowering the apron, without warning of the danger which might attend the attempt to execute such order, or instruction as to how such danger might be avoided; and that such negligence was the negligence of the master, without which the injury would not have occurred.
The evidence tended to show that plaintiff’s injury proximately resulted either from the negligence of the master alone, or that, because of the dual capacity of the foreman, it resulted from the negligence of the master combined with that of a fellow servant. It appears that plaintiff was a “coal passer,” handling coal; that he had never had anything to do with the apron before, and had never seen it handled; that he worked in dif
To lower the apron it seems that there was a hook to be unfastened at each end thereof, and it appears that plaintiff, in obedience to the foreman’s order, was attempting to unfasten one of these hooks when the foreman lowered the other end of the apron, and plaintiff’s hand was caught and injured. The matter was not one of ordinary common labor in which he and the foreman were engaged as colaborers upon an equal footing. It was a matter pertaining to the foreman’s duties and was evidently an undertaking fraught with some danger to one unaccustomed to handling the appliance and ignorant of the manner in which it was operated.
The foreman is the alter ego of the master, and he may not order a servant to perform an unusual task, disassociated from the latter’s ordinary duties, and which involves dangers unknown to and unappreciated by him, and then negligently inflict an injury upon such servant who is attempting to obey or carry out the order.
And it will not do to say that the manual act of lifting the apron was common labor in which plaintiff and Fuqua were engaged as colaborers and hence the injury was occasioned solely by the negligence of a fellow servant. The evidence shows quite clearly that there was more to be done than the mere manual act of lifting a heavy object, and the injury must at least be regarded as having been caused by the negligence of the vice principal in ordering the servant to perform what for him was an unusual task, outside the scope of his ordinary duties, and one involving more
II. It is urged that error inheres in the instruction given for plaintiff purporting to cover the case and directing a verdict for him in the event that the jury found certain facts. This assignment of error is well taken. The instruction, among other things, told the jury that “it was the duty of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to work,” and authorized a verdict upon a finding, among other things, “that the said gate or apron was dangerous and unsafe.”
The duty of the master to furnish a safe place to work was in no way an issue in the case. And it was not alleged nor was there any evidence to show that the gate or apron was in itself dangerous or unsafe; though danger might attend the execution of an order respecting the handling thereof by one in plaintiff’s position, and under the circumstances appearing in evidence.
The instructions must not broaden the issues made by the pleadings. [See Kirkpatrick v. Railway, 211 Mo. 68, 109 S. W. 682; Kellogg v. Kirksville, 132 Mo. App. 519, 112 S. W. 296; Sinnamon v. Moore, 161 Mo. App. 168, 142 S. W. 494; Crayton v. Huntzinger, 163 Mo. App. 718, 147 S. W. 512; Gabriel v. Street Railway, 164 Mo. App. 56, 148 S. W. 168; Green v. United
And to submit matters which, under the evidence, could in no way have contributed to produce plaintiff’s injury, is undoubtedly reversible error. In Huston v. Railroad, supra, l. c. 586, it is said:
“We find that prejudicial error was committed by the learned trial judge in submitting to the jury the issue of whether the injury was caused in whole or in part by the failure of defendant to maintain and use a toggle on the machine. The absence of this appliance did not and could not in any way have contributed to the injury. ... In submitting this issue to the jury the court, in effect, declared that there were facts adduced by evidence from which the jury reasonably might infer that the absence of the toggle had a direct effect in the production of the injury. A declaration of this character which is unsupported by substantial evidence must be presumed to have had some effect on the minds of the jury and, consequently, to have been prejudicial to the defendant.”
Further error inheres to this instruction in that it requires the jury to find that plaintiff’s fingers were injured “as set out in the petition.” Instructions should be predicated upon the pertinent facts in evidence (keeping within the scope of the pleadings), and should refer the jury to the evidence and not to the pleadings. [See Bank v. Dowler, 163 Mo. App. l. c. 68, 145 S. W. 843, and cases there cited.]
It is unnecessary to pass upon tbe sufficiency of the statement of the cause of action to sustain a judgment. It may be well, however, to call attention to the fact that it does not clearly appear that the pleading ■counts upon the foreman’s negligence with respect to the order given under the circumstances above mentioned.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with leave to respondent to amend his statement of tbe ■cause of action, if so advised.