149 Mo. App. 456 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
The amended petition in this case alleges that on the 27th day of March, 1903, defendant was operating a railroad and had a station in Stoddard county called Zeta, at which plaintiff was employed
The ansAver was a general denial, a,plea of contributory negligence, and assumed risk. The plaintiff obtained a judgment in the sum of five thousand dollars, from which the defendant has appealed.
It appears that on the morning of the accident, plaintiff was working as a common laborer, without any special training or experience, shingling the top of the water tank AVhich had an incline of six feet in twelve. M. F. House, defendant’s foreman, on this morning came up on the roof with a coil of rope in his hands and made preparations for lowering the scaffolding surrounding the sides of the tank, which scaffolding consisted of two upright slabs, each sixteen feet in length, and nailed or spliced together at the ends, making a combined length of thirty-tAVO feet; one piece of which, thus nailed, was called a “single bent,” and a “double bent” was made by nailing a board across the two pieces, thirty-two feet in length each, thus fastening them, so that the double
The scaffolding was to be lowered by fastening a rope around the top of one of the thirty-two feet uprights, and the other end of this rope was to be held by a man on the top of the tank, who, by letting the rope slip slowly through his hands, would lower the piece to the ground. In this case, there were single bents and double bents surrounding the tank — at intervals, all around it — one of the double bents standing in next to the tank and the other one out from it, the inner timbers of the double bents forming a circle immediately around the tank and the outer ones forming a corresponding circle of greater circumference. The space immediately between the track and the tank was so narrow that these uprights could not stand in pairs, and around this part of the tank they were placed singly. The foreman, as a means of safety to the men on the tank, wrapped the. rope (to be held by plaintiff) around one of the rafters above the shingled part, which purpose, it is contended, was sufficient to permit plaintiff to control the play of the rope and let the scaffolding lean gradually until it lay on the ground. The foreman himself let down the first load, which was a single bent. He next called the plaintiff and instructed him as to his duty, fixed the rope for him and told him to hold it until he went down and not to let any slack in it, and remarked that he was afraid “there was someone going to be killed.” That he told plaintiff to hold the rope that way until he went down to watch what was going on — “so I can give you instructions. I cannot see what is going on here, and you work according to instructions.” That he went below to Avatch and direct the work from a position where he could see both the plaintiff and those fastening the rope to the end of the scaffolding. This second load was also a single bent and was lowered in safety. Plaintiff then returned to his shingling until again called by
The principal error complained of in this case is the failure of the court at the conclusion of all the testimony to sustain the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence.
The ground of negligence alleged in the petition and on which- the respondent seeks to establish appellant’s liability is that while respondent had been lowering only one of the upright pieces at a time, appellant’s foreman, M. F. House, in order to hasten the work, and without informing respondent, and without respondent having any knowledge of what was to be done, negligently directed laborers who were working on the ground to fasten the rope to two of the upright pieces at once, thus doubling the load; that the load was thus doubled, pursuant to the directions of the said foreman, and the increased weight, thus attached, was more than respondent could hold, and it dragged him off the roof. In a subsequent paragraph of his petition, he stated that his fall was occasioned solely by the double burden attached to the rope.
The contention of the appellant is that there is absolutely no proof in the record to sustain the charge that the foreman directed the burden to be doubled immediately before the accident occurred, and that such allegation of the petition is wholly unsupported by any 'evidence 'in the case.
On cross-examination the witness testified as follows : “Q. You never gave any specific directions as to how to .take it down? A. No, sir. Q. You never told them to put two together here and there? A. No, sir.”
On redirect examination he was asked: “Q. That is the reason you told them to lower a whole bent at a time, because you could not lower them in any other way — you say you ordered them to lower them.that way? A. Yes, sir; two at a time.”
Now it is claimed that the testimony of this witness contains antagonistic and irreconcilable statements of facts, the one tending to sustain the allegations of the petition and the other to disprove them, and that the testimony brings it within the principle of law declared in the case of Oglesby v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 177 Mo. l. c. 296, 76 S. W. 623. A consideration of the testimony of this witness in the light of all the other facts and circumstances produced in evidence does not warrant such a conclusion. The mere fact that he was induced to state, under a very skillful cross-examination, that .the directions were general and not specific does not deprive his testimony of all probative force in support of the
This case was tried both by the respondent and the appellant on instructions as to the liability of the appellant by reason of the negligence of the appellant’s servants in fastening two upright pieces instead of one to the rope to be lowered at the same time without the knowledge of the respondent, and the court gave the following instructions at the request of the appellant:
“2. The court instructs the jury that the mere fact, if you find it to be a fact, that the plaintiff received some or all of the injuries complained of at the time and place complained of, such fact will not authorize you to return a verdict in his favor, but, on the contrary, before*466 you will be justified in giving a verdict to plaintiff you must find that his injuries were occasioned by the neglect of the defendant’s agents in fastening two upright pieces instead of one to his rope to be lowered at the same time without the knowledge of the plaintiff and that the additional burden thus imposed, if it was additional burden, was the cause of plaintiff’s fall, and that said additional burden was placed on the rope by the direction of the defendant’s foreman, House, and that such acts of foreman House was negligence and unless you so find your verdict must be for the defendant.”
“3. The court instructs you that although you may find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff’s fall and consequent injury was the direct result of fastening two upright pieces to his rope with which he was lowering them, and that they were so attached by the other laborers around the tank, and that such conduct was negligence, yet your verdict must be for the defendant unless you further find and believe that the same was ordered and directed by foreman House.”
Under the evidence in the case, no material error was committed in the giving of any of the instructions in the case, and the case was properly tried under the issues made by the pleadings, with sufficient evidence to carry the case to the consideration of the jury.
It is further claimed that the judgment should be reversed because the damages awarded plaintiff were excessive.
The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was twenty-five years of age, strong, and in perfect health. He fell the distance of forty feet to the ground and was rendered unconscious. He was sent to a hospital at Tyler, Texas, maintained by the defendant, where he remained two months and was discharged on crutches. The trial was had three years after the accident, and the plaintiff at that time could not,.labor or wear heavy clothing; he could not bend his right ankle. On cross-examination he stated that he left the hospital on the
Under the evidence adduced we are not prepared to say that the judgment for five thousand dollars was so excessive as to warrant the conclusion that it was the product of passion, bias or prejudice on the part of the jury.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.