160 Mo. App. 501 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff’s intestate on account of personal injuries received by him through the alleged negligence of defendant. The verdict and judgment were for plaintiff in the circuit court and defendant prosecuted the appeal. Since the appeal was perfected, plaintiff in the action departed this life, and the suit has been revived and now proceeds in the name of Mr. Troll, his administrator.
Defendant, incorporated, is a manufacturer of cement, and owned and maintained a large building in St. Louis county which it employed in its business. Above this building it maintained a very large iron smokestack, about four and one-half feet in diameter, which towered as much as forty-five feet above the roof of the building. At the time decedent received his injury, he was in defendant’s employ as a laborer and engaged, along with about sixteen other men, all under the immediate command and charge of Smith, the foreman, in preparing to take down or remove the smokestack above mentioned. In order hr accomplish this result, it was necessary to erect a large pole, known as a “gin pole” on the roof of defendant’s building, over which the smokestack protruded. On this gin pole, block and tackle or pulleys with ropes were to be attached, and decedent, with several others, was engaged about this pole lifting the pulleys or blocks together with the ropes from the ground to the roof
For decedent, the evidence is that he was wholly without knowledge as to this matter, as he did
The specifications of negligence contained.in the petition and relied upon for a recovery are two in number, and both relate to a breach of duty on the part of defendant’s vice-principal, the foreman. It is averred, substantially, that Smith was negligent, in that he ordered Fuller to go aloft on the smokestack and dissever the large iron band above decedent, without first loosening or cutting the guy wires and under circumstances which obviously threatened, decedent’s safety,- and was negligent, too, in ordering decedent to work on the roof of the building about the gin pole immediately beneath the iron band and where the foreman might well know it would likely spring upon and injure him. The petition avers that these two specifications of neglis'ence concurred and each contributed
But it is argued, though the foreman was negligent in respect to both orders given, in the circumstances of the case, such negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury and the court should have directed a verdict for defendant because Puller testified in his cross-examination that the bolt broke earlier than he anticipated and unexpectedly precipitated the iron band forward without giving him an opportunity to warn the men below. It is true Puller said that he did not expect the bolt holding the two parts.of the iron band together to break so suddenly and that he intended to call out a warning to those below about the time, and immediately before the band was finally dissevered. But his purpose as to this was unexpectedly defeated through the sudden breaking of the iron bolt (wMch he referred to as being “rotten”) under the third heavy blow from Ms hammer. As before said, Puller testified for decedent and these statements appear in his cross-examination. The argument is that
At the instance of decedent, the court gave one long instruction which very properly hypothesized all of the facts and submitted the questions of defendant’s negligence touching both specifications thereof in the petition, that is to say, the negligence of the foreman in ordering Fuller to perform the task without loosening the guy wires and his order as well in directing decedent to work immediately beneath and in such a dangerous situation without notice or. warning that Fuller was engaged, or about to be, in dissevering the iron- band above. The instruction authorizes á recovery for decedent if the jury should find from the evidence that he was in the exercise of ordinary care on his part and that such orders by the foreman were negligently given and directly contributed to cause the injuries of decedent mentioned in the evidence. The employment of the word “contributed” in this instruction is criticized and it has been frequently condemned by the courts in those cases where there is for consideration only the negligence of defendant and plain