84 Mo. App. 565 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover damages for personal injuries received by the former on account of the negligence of the latter. The plaintiff had judgment in the court below and the defendant appealed.
I. The defendant assails the judgment on the ground that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that it' is nowhere stated therein that the plaintiff did not know of the condition of the machine at which he was at work at the time of his injury and did not know the danger incident to its operation.
The petition alleged that the defendant was engaged in running a packing house and among other things conducted therein a “hog entrail machine” which was propelled by steam with belts attached to wheels or pulleys. That upon said machine was a shaft with knives thereon. That heretofore, to-wit: on or about the nineteenth day of January,
That on the date' aforesaid, the plaintiff being so directed as aforesaid, attempted to and did by means of the “stopper” attempt to put said belt off of the pulley that operated the knives onto the pulley adjoining, and did succeed in putting the belt far enough over as to stop the pulley which operated the knives and start the other pulley to running upon which the belt was put; and commenced work in obedience to directions upon the knives after the same became stationary -and while so working thereat, the belt suddenly slipped over from the pulley on which the same was left and came in contact with the pulley or wheel that turned the knives and suddenly started the same, and as a result thereof, the first two fingers on the right hand of the plaintiff were cut off. And the plaintiff states that sometime prior to said accident, to-wit: abotit one week, plaintiff called the attention of'the boss in control of him to the condition of said belts and wheels and of the danger which
The law is now quite well settled in this state to the effect that where one enters the service of another he takes upon himself the natural and ordinary risks and perils incident' to such service. The master is not an insurer of the absolute safety of the servant nor is he bound, under all circumstances, to use the most approved machinery, or • that which is absolutely safe. He is only required to use ordinary care in this respect. And where the servant having notice of the existence of a defect in the machinery of the master and voluntarily enters upon the duty assigned him with such machinery, he assumes the risk of the injuries resulting therefrom. Where a servant, while in the employ of the master, discovers defects in the machinery which, in the performance of his duty, he is required to operate, and is assured by the master that it is safe or not dangerous, and in reliance thereon he continues in the master’s service, being careful himself, he may recover for an injury resulting from such defect. Keegan v. Kavanaugh, 62 Mo. 230; Flynn v. Railway, 78 Mo. 195; Stephens v. Railway, 96 Mo. 207; Holloran v. Foundry Co., 133 Mo. 470. It is therefore plain that the plaintiff’s petition, when tested by the
II. The defendant objects that the court erred in refusing its peremptory instruction. It appears from the undisputed evidence that the live pulley attached to the shaft was driven by a leather belt. When it was desired to stop the shaft this belt, by means of an appliance called a “stopper,” was pushed over on the dead pulley. It further appears that on several occasions, after the shaft had been brought to rest by pushing off the belt from the live pulley, that owing to some defect or imperfections in either the stopper or the pulleys themselves, or in the way they were placed on the shaft, or were related to each other, it did not remain whore it was thus moved but had worked its own way back onto the live pulley, and in that way it put the shaft again in motion.
According to the testimony of the plaintiff the shaft was at rest when he was called down from a room above stairs, in which he had been at work, to sharpen the knives of the machine of which the shaft was a part, and while doing so, it (the shaft) was set in motion by the belt slipping from the dead pulley onto the live one, and the defendant was thereby hurt. It will not do to say, therefore, that there was no evidence adduced tending to show what was the proximate cause of the injury. The facts which this evidence tended to show were, we think,’ sufficient to originate the inference that the machine was defective and that the injury was caused by such defect.
Under the issues made by the pleadings it was a question for the jury to determine whether the plaintiff discovered the defect in the machine and called the defendant’s attention to it, and whether the latter thereupon assured the former that there was no danger and to proceed with his •work; and whether or not such former in reliance on the
III. The defendant, however, contends that the plaintiff had knowledge .of the danger to be incurred in the performance of his duty^that he was on an equal footing with the defendant in that regard, and that therefore he assumed the risk. The plaintiff in reply to this contention insists that the evidence discloses that on the day he was injured he was not working at the machine, but upstairs in another room, and that while he was so absent the defendant’s foreman put in a new machine and sent for the plaintiff to come down and sharpen its knives; that the plaintiff did not know the condition the machine was then in, nor did he have an opportunity to examine it before he commenced work' on it; that the shaft knives and perhaps both of the pulleys were entirely new, and as to their condition the plaintiff knew nothing; and for these reasons he could not be chargeable with the. assumption of the risk incident to the operation of the machine.
The defendant, however, in avoidance,of the force of this insistence, argues that it should not be considered for the reason that to do so would be to give countenance to a departure from the theory of the case presented by the plaintiff’s petition. In response to this suggestion, it is to be observed that if the plaintiff by such evidence tendered issues different from those formulated by the pleadings, the defendant interposed no objection to such evidence but, on the contrary, proceeded with the trial of the issues thus ten
If there was a variance between the allegations of negligence and the evidence offered in their support and the defendant was thereby surprised or misled to his prejudice, he should have taken advantage of it by affidavit, showing in what respect. Olmstead v. Smith, 87 Mo. 602; Meyer v. Ohambers, 68 Mo. 626.
The defendant’s foreman took out the old shaft and replaced it with a new one. His attention had been previously called by-plaintiff to the defective condition of the “stopper” or appliance used in shoving the belt from one pulley to the other. The plaintiff when he was called to the new machine had a right to assume that the defendant, in making the change, had obviated the danger that had existed in operating the old, and that defendant’s foreman, when he stopped the machine and called the plaintiff to work on it, had shoved the belt off the live pulley so that it would not immediately work back and thereby set the machine in motion. Either the machine was defective, or else the defendant’s foreman neglected to shove the belt away from the live pulley a sufficient distance to prevent it from getting back and starting the machine. Evidence from which these in
IV. The plaintiff in rebuttal asked the witness Mantel whether the “stopper” was in the same condition now as it was at the time the plaintiff was hurt. The witness answered that Mr. Loschke—defendant’s foreman—cut it out after that.
The defendant’s counsel moved the court to strike this answer of the witness from the record for the reason that it ■was immaterial and did not tend to show the condition of the “stopper” at the time of the injury. This objection was overruled, and this action of the court is t now assigned as error. The defendant itself had previously during the trial propounded to its own witness Loschke this identical question, which was answered by him in the negative. The condition of the “stopper” after the injury was not properly an issuable fact in the case. But the defendant, by his evidence, introduced it into the case. He sought by his evidence to establish the affirmative of that issue, and that be- ■ ing so it is rather difficult to understand why the plaintiff should have been denied the right to introduce evidence to uphold the negative of it. The answer of the plaintiff’s witness tended to support the negative of the issue. If it was error to permit such testimony to be given by plaintiff witness, it was error invited by the defendant, and of which he can not complain.
And what has just been said is equally applicable to the action of the court in permitting the plaintiff’s witness Mantel to further testify that he had shown the defendant’s counsel where Loschke had cut out the “stopper.” This testi
Y. The objection that the plaintiff’s attorney was guilty of misconduct in his closing argument to the jury can not be noticed, since nothing of the hind appears in the bill of exceptions. Matters of that kind occurring in the presence of the court can not be noticed here unless they appear from the recitals in the bill of exceptions itself. The mere insertion of the same in the motion for the new trial, as one of the grounds therefor, is not sufficient. James v. Kansas City, and cases there cited (decided at present term).
The eighth and tenth instructions given in defendant’s series are substantially the same as its eleventh, which was refused. The former cover the same ground as the latter and therefore it was not error to refuse such latter. There was no error in refusing defendant’s twelfth because the court had already given its second which was in substance the same.
The defendant complains further of the action of the court in refusing its fourteenth instruction, which declared:
“Even though the jury may believe from the evidence that there was a defect in the stopper used to throw the belt off and on the pulley, that both plaintiff and Losehke, defendant’s foreman, knew of such defect; that plaintiff called the attention of said Losehke to such defect and said Losehke told plaintiff to go ahead and it would not harm him; that defendant did not repair it and plaintiff, knowing it had not been repaired, continued to use said machine in its defective condition, if you so find, the plaintiff can no,t recover and your verdict must be for the defendant.” There is no evidence whatever that when plaintiff called the attention of defendant’s foreman to the defect in the “stopper” that the latter promised to repair it. The evidence was that the de*576 fendaut’s foreman assured plaintiff that it was not unsafe and to go ahead with his work on it. The evidence tends to show that the plaintiff relied on defendant’s assurance and was thereby induced to continue in its service until he was hurt. There was no evidence that defendant promised to make repairs or that the plaintiff was induced by such promise to continue in the former’s service.
If the defendant had promised to repair the defect and did not do so in a reasonable time thereafter, and notwithstanding this default the plaintiff continued to work with the machine, and was injured in consequence of such defect, 'he would not be entitled to recover. The rule asserted byf¡ this instruction neither in the abstract nor concrete is a corL rect expression of the law, and besides this, it was not authorized by the evidence.
The defendant’s fifteenth instruction does not cover or relate to any issue in the case and was properly refused.
The judgment will be affirmed.