Ellen Woods sued The Juvenile Shoe ■Corporation of America, a corporation, hereinafter “the manufacturer,” and Robinson Shoe Company, a corporation, a retail ■shoe store, hereinafter “the shoe store,” and Robinson’s Kansas Shoe Company, Inc., a ■chain of shoe stores, hereinafter “the shoe ■chain,” for $200,000 damages for personal injuries allegedly resulting in the necessary .amputation of plaintiff’s left leg, based on negligence of the manufacturer in manufacturing and negligence of the shoe store and shoe chain in selling to plaintiff a shoe with a tack in it, without inspecting it, and breach of implied warranty of fitness. After answering plaintiff’s petition, the shoe store and shoe chain filed a joint cross-claim against the manufacturer for full indemnity for any judgment that might be rendered for plaintiff and against the shoe ■store and shoe chain. This is an appeal by the shoe store and shoe chain from a judgment of the circuit court dismissing the cross-claim.
First for consideration is respondent-manufacturer’s claim that this appeal is premature; that the judgment of October 11, 1961 dismissing the cross-claim did not dispose of all of the issues in the case, and therefore was an unappealable judgment. Appellants-shoe store and shoe chain counter with the proposition that the trial court amended its judgment, thereby making it .an appealable order. Respondent retorts that the amendment was invalid because made more than 30 days after the judgment.
After the issues were made up on plaintiff’s petition and defendants’ answers, and after the shoe chain and shoe store filed their cross-claim, the manufacturer filed a motion to dismiss the cross-claim for failure to state a “cause of action” upon which relief can be granted. The trial court heard the motion to dismiss and on October 11, 1961 made an order that the cross-claim “be and the same is hereby dismissed * * At that time, October 11, the issues framed by plaintiff’s petition and defendants’ answers had not been tried; no order for a separate trial of the cross-claim had been requested or made, and no separate trial of the cross-claim had been conducted. The order of October 11 was not a final, appeal-able judgment. It was an interlocutory order. Dotson v. E. W. Bacharach, Inc., Mo. Sup., 325 S.W.2d .737, 739 [4]. An interlocutory order is always under the control of the court making it. Barlow v. Scott, Mo.Sup.,
Under the ruling of the majority of this Court in Crouch v. Tourtelot, Mo.Sup.,
On the merits, the question is whether the cross-claim states a “cause of action” for indemnity against the manufacturer, based on negligence. The amended cross-claim recites the allegations of plaintiff’s petition that the shoes which caused plaintiff’s injury were manufactured and placed in commerce by the manufacturer, and sold to plaintiff by cross-claimants; that the manufacturer was under a duty to exercise due care in their manufacture and that both manufacturer and cross-claimants were under a duty to inspect the shoes; that there was an implied warranty to plaintiff by the manufacturer and the cross-claimants that the shoes were not defective, and that these warranties were breached. The cross-claim further alleges that the shoes in question were sold by the manufacturer to cross-claimants, which as retailer sold the shoes to plaintiff; that neither cross-claimant knew of any defect and did not cause or create any defect in the shoes; that if such defect existed it was caused and created by the manufacturer at the time it made the shoes. The liability of the manufacturer to cross-claimants in the event of a recovery by plaintiff against cross-claimants on the-basis of negligence is set forth in paragraph 5 of the cross-claim, which follows: “5. If plaintiff should prevail on the charge of negligence in this action against cross-claimants, or either of them, it will be due to a finding of the alleged fact that The-Juvenile Shoe Corporation of America created a defective shoe and that cross-claimants are liable to plaintiff because of alleged passive negligence in failing to discover the alleged defect, correct same or warn plaintiff; and in such an event, cross-claimants will have become liable, with The Juvenile Shoe Corporation of America, for harm allegedly caused to plaintiff because of" cross-claimants’ alleged negligent failure to discover, make safe or warn of, a dangerous condition in said shoe, which was created by the negligence and misconduct of The Juvenile Shoe Corporation of America, and which, as between cross-claimants on the one hand and The Juvenile Shoe Corporation of America on the other, it was-The Juvenile Shoe Corporation of America’s duty to make safe; and cross-claimants are entitled to restitution and indemnity from The Juvenile Shoe Corporation of America for expenditures properly made in-the discharge of such liability, including the amount of any judgment which may be rendered against cross-claimants and all expenses and costs incurred in the defense of plaintiff’s action against cross-claimant.”' The prayer of cross-claimants is for judgment against the manufacturer for the-amount of any judgment that might be rendered in favor of plaintiff and against cross-claimants, and for their costs and expenses in defending against the charges asserted by plaintiff.
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The cross-claim states a claim upon which relief can be granted by way of indemnity for exposure of the indemnitee to liability for negligence by the act of the in-demnitor. In Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Pay way Feed Mills, Inc., Mo.Sup.,
We are not asked to determine whether the cross-claim also states a claim upon which relief can be granted by way of indemnity for liability imposed for breach of implied warranty of fitness.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to reinstate the cross-claim, and for further proceedings according to law.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by HOUSER, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
All of the Judges concur.
Notes
. Apparently following the suggestion of the correct procedure in such situation made in Dotson, supra, 325 S.W.2d, loc. cit. 739, since the language of the order is identical with the language of Dotson.
