151 Mo. App. 438 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This is an action prosecuted by a servant against his master to recover damages for per
Before going to the merits of the case we shall dispose of a question of practice presented by respondent. The order of appeal was made February 21, 1910, at the January term of the circuit court of Adair county and appellant was granted leave “to file its bill of exceptions in this cause on or before or during the October term, 1910, of said circuit court.” There are three regular terms of the Adair Circuit Court held respectively in January, May and October, and the point advanced by respondent is that the bill of exceptions cannot be considered for the reason that the circuit court had no power to grant time beyond the next term of court (the May term) in which to file the bill of exceptions. It is argued that the statute (section 728) “implies that where the bill is not- and cannot be filed during the term time, the court has the power to allow further time, but that such time is limited, and must be a reasonable time in which to prepare and settle the bill; and that in the first instance the longest period that can legally be allowed is until the next regular term. In the event, however, that for some good cause shown, the bill cannot be filed within the time originally allowed, the court can extend the time. It will not do to say that the words ‘or within
The statute contains no such restriction as that contended for by respondent. It provides (section 2029, Revised Statutes 1909): ‘ ‘ Such exceptions may be written and filed at the time or during the term of the court at which it is taken, or within such time thereafter as the court may by an order entered of record allow, which may be extended by the court or judge in vacation for good cause shown.”
The length of time to be allowed' beyond the term for filing a bill of exceptions of necessity must be left to the sound discretion of the trial court. Of course if the trial court should abuse its discretion as respondent suggests might be done, such abuse could be reviewed and corrected in the appellate court. Very often the court knows that under existing conditions a bill of exceptions cannot be prepared for filing at the first succeeding term. The court stenographer may be ill or too much crowded with work that must be given precedence to furnish the transcript in time. We do not feel disposed to add a restriction on the discretion the court may exercise which is not imposed by statute and is not supported by any valid reason. The objection to the bill of exceptions is overruled.
Defendant is a corporation engaged in mining coal and plaintiff at the time of his injury, which occurred August 25, 1909, was a miner employed in mining coal in a newly opened mine known as Midland No. 3. He was being hoisted out of the shaft in a temporary box used for hoisting and was injured by a piece of falling timber which a carpenter at work building a structure called a “tipple” accidentally or negligently let fall into the shaft over the mouth of which the tipple was being built. It is conceded that the box or cage in which plaintiff was riding was not
On the part of defendant, the evidence tends to show that the shaft was ninety-four feet deep; that the entries were only about eighty feet long; that the tipple had not been completed and that the hoisting engines and machinery and all the equipment were temporary and were not what would be in use when the preparatory development work should be completed. The substance of this evidence is that the little mining of coal then in progress was but incidental to' the opening of the mine and was not the main part, or an important part, of the operations then being conducted. The most important fact brought out by defendant is that the small cubic contents of the underground workings then completed were insufficient to absorb and dissipate the whole expansive force of the explosions of
In making application of the statute to a case such as the present where a mine is being opened up and the mining of coal is but an incident to the prosecution of necessary development work, the true construction of the statute leads to the conclusion that the men employed in mining should have the protection of the statute just as soon as cages conforming to the specifications thereof can be put in successful operation. To require the mine owner to install them' at a time when they would be wrecked or disabled by the expansive force of necessary explosions would be unreasonable and, on the other hand, to say that the owner may delay their installation until such time as mining becomes the chief and not the incidental object of the operations might unnecessarily deprive miners of the protection of a wise and humane law during a period when it could be given them. Under this interpretation the conflicting evidence of the parties presents issues of fact for the solution of the triers of fact and the learned trial judge properly overruled the demurrer to the evidence. That he entertained a cor-
But, afterward, in ruling on the instructions, the court appears to have departed from this view, since we find both in the instructions given at the request of plaintiff and in those asked by defendant, which were refused, the mine was treated as a mine in operation and the court refused to submit the issue of whether or not the work had progressed to the point where it was practicable to install statutory cages. This was prejudicial error and the sole • remaining question for our decision is whether or not that error has been properly preserved for our consideration in the bill of exceptions.
The record in question is as follows: ‘ ‘ Thereupon the court gave to the jury the following instructions for plaintiff.” Then follow the instruietions after which is the recital: “To the giving of which instructions and each of them the defendant excepted at the time.” Next is the statement: “Defendant prayed the court to give to the jury the following instructions, to-wit:” After setting out defendant’s refused' instructions, follows the recital, “which instructions the court refused to give, to which refusal the defendant excepted at the time and saves herein its exceptions.”
Counsel for plaintiff insist in their brief: “The appellant having made no objection at the time to plaintiff’s instructions or to the action of the court in giving said instructions, or in refusing its instructions 1, 2, 3 and 4, those instructions cannot be brought before this court for review.” [Citing Sheets v. Insurance Co., 226 Mo. 613, decided by the Supreme Court and State v. Reed, 128 S. W. 4, decided by the Springfield Court of Appeals. The opinion in the Sheets
“The only objection made by counsel for appellant to the action of the court in giving said instruction numbered 3 is contained in the following language: ‘Which said instructions numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 asked by plaintiff, and each of them, the defendant then and there excepted and still excepts.’ While the foregoing language saves appellant’s exceptions to the action of the court in giving said instruction number 3, yet the record nowhere' shows that counsel for appellant made any objection whatever to the same, or to the action of the court in giving it.
“It is elementary that before one can legally except to the action of the court in giving or refusing instructions, he must first request the court to give the same or object thereto, as the case may be, before his exceptions will be availing.’’
Rules of practice and procedure are as essential to the just and orderly administration of justice as are the rules and principles of the substantive law. But a rule, whether it be one of practice or of substantive law, that has no good reason behind it, no real purpose to serve in the orderly and uniform administration of the law is not a rule of justice at all but an edict of autocratic power. Let us see if the rule contended for by plaintiff is supported by substantial reason. It is a settled and very just rule that no exception should be considered by the appellate court where the trial court was not given a fair opportunity to correct the error at the time of its commission. It would be most unfair to permit a party to acquiesce apparently in the ruling of the court and then, after the day had gone against him, to complain of those rulings. That is the reason that lies behind the rule that a party must object at the time to the giving of instructions
If this were a case of first impression the writer, speaking only for himself, would say that an exception taken immediately after the court announced its ruling would be the substantial and legal equivalent of an objection offered '‘before, the announcement. It would notify the court that the exceptor was complaining of error in the instructions at a time when the court would have a full and fair opportunity to correct the error before harm could be done either party and that is the only office an objection could perform: The writer (speaking only for himself) fails to perceive any good reason for saying that, theoretically, at least, the objector must announce his objection before the ruling is announced or forever afterwards hold his peace. But this view has not received the sanction of the Supreme Court in the excerpt above quoted and since it is our duty to follow the latest decision of that court, we must hold that the rulings of the trial court in giving the instructions asked by plaintiff are not before us for review. We do not agree with the argument of plaintiff that the opinion of the Supreme Court holds that a party whose instructions are refused must object to their refusal before they are refused. Whatever aid that idea may receive from the language employed in the opinión we think was inadvertently and not intentionally given. Until a party’s request for a certain instruction is refused,, he has no ground for complaint — no objection to make. When the refusal comes he is at his rope’s end and has nothing to do but except. If the argument of plaintiff is sound, it would be incumbent on counsel to say, when he offers his instructions to the court, or have it understood that he said: “I offer, your Honor, instructions numbered one, two, three and four. I request that they be given and I here and now object to the refusal of any of them.”