Baird v. Larabee Flour Mills Corp.

220 S.W. 988, 203 Mo. App. 432, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 190
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 988 (Baird v. Larabee Flour Mills Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baird v. Larabee Flour Mills Corp., 220 S.W. 988, 203 Mo. App. 432, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 190 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, Larabee Flour Mills Corporation, on account of the negligence of the defendant, Whiteman, *434 vice-principal and foreman of the corporation. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum. of $5000 and against hoth defendants.

The facts show that defendant, Larabee Flour Mills Corporation, hereinafter called the corporation, was incorporated under the laws of the State of Kansas and engaged in the operation of a flour mill in the State of Missouri near St. Joseph. Plaintiff was injured in the following manner:

There existed in the mill an elevator or manlift which was used by employees therein for the purpose of going from one floor to another in the mill. The elevator or manlift ran through circular openings in the floors. These openings were about thirty inches wide at the widest point. The distance from the floors to the ceiling was about ten feet. The manlift was operated by an electric motor and consisted of a continuous belt that ran around 'pulleys from the basement to the eighth story of the building. On this belt was attached steps about eighteen inches long. About four feet above each step there was a handle to be used by the passenger to hold himself on the step. There were sixteen of such steps attached to the belt upon which the men stood as they were carried from one floor to another. The manlift operated continuously and it was not intended that it be started or stopped on each occasion of use, but it was run slow enough so that persons at the various floors might step off or on to the steps of the same while it was in motion. The manlift could be started or stopped by means of a cord attached along side of it. This cord was about the size of an ordinary window rope. The cord passed through eyelets about four feet apart which were attached to the frame of the manlift. The manlift was started or stopped by pulling the cord which, by a certain mechanism, caused the belt to shift from a live to a dead pulley and the current by the use of the cord was shut off or put on by a switch. The manlift could be started or stopped by pulling on the cord from *435 any floor of the building or by any person riding on the lift. If the one holding the cord did not hold it firmly, anyone could put the manlift in motion by pulling the cord, or the manlift could be started if any person who stopped it let loose of the cord. It required very little force to manipulate the cord.

On the morning of October 24, 1918, the defendant, Whiteman, who was plaintiff’s foreman, noticed that the manlift was moving too slowly and was overloaded. Previous experience told him that such a condition sometimes caused the motor to burn out. Whiteman, standing on the 4th floor, began to tell the men, one by one, as they reached the 4th floor, to. get off thereat. The first man told got off but plaintiff when he reached the fourth floor did not get off but cohtinued on and when he reached the fifth floor Whiteman pulled the rope or cord which controlled the manlift to stop the same and at the same time called to plaintiff to get off. The manlift stopped at the 5th floor and while plaintiff was in the act of getting off another ordinary employee of the corporation pulled the rope from the seventh floor, causing the manlift to start, throwing plaintiff so that he fell through the opening of the manlift to the fourth floor to his serious injury.

The foregoing is a general statement as to the manner in which plaintiff was injured, other facts necessary to be understood in determining the points raised will be disclosed in the course of the opinion.

The petition alleged the incorporation of the corporation defendant; that Whiteman was .an employee of the corporation as its foreman, superintendent and vice-principal; that Whiteman wa<s a resident of the State of Missouri; that defendant corporation operated a flour mill with a manlift running by electric power; it described the method of its starting and stopping; that plaintiff was riding on the manlift in the prosecution of his work. It then alleges:

“ ... that at said time the defendant company, acting through the defendant Elmer W. White- *436 man, as its agent, o superintendant and vice-principal, and the defendant Elmer W. Whiteman carelessly and negligently stopped said ‘manlift’ when and at a time when the step upon which plaintiff was riding was some three or four feet above one of the floors of said building and negligently■ ordered, directed and commanded plaintiff to get off of and alight from said ‘manlift;’ that while obeying the direction, order and command of defendant company, and defendant Elmer W. Whiteman, and while in the exercise of ordinary care on his part and while in the act of stepping from and leaving said ‘manlift,’ said ‘manlift’ was by reason of the carelessness, negligence and recklessness of defendant company acting through the defendant Elmer W. Whiteman, and the defendant Elmer W. Whiteman, suddenly started and permitted to be suddenly started in motion and that as a result of said negligence plaintiff was thrown from said ‘manlift,’ etc.”

This was an amended petition. The original petition contained the same words except those set forth above in italics which were inserted by interlineation.

Defendants’ first point is that' the trial court was without jurisdiction of the cause for the reason that the ameded petition stated a separable controversy and that in, due time, after the amendment of the petition, it filed a petition and bond for removal to the federal court. In support of this contention defendants urge that “to start an elevator in motion is a very distinct thing from permitting it to be started.” That the petition is to be. construed as charging that the defendant corporation permitted the elevator to be. started and that .such a charge authorized the introduction of evidence of insufficient rules and safety devices, and that defendant Whiteman could not be held responsible for that negligence, if any, and, therefore, there was an independent charge against the defendant corporation. And it" is claimed that if the charge that the manlift was permitted to be started is held to be a charge against the defendant Whiteman, it charges an act which *437 on Ms part could only be an act of non-feasance for which the corporation would be liable and not White-man.

We tMnk that the-allegations of the petition amount to a charge of misfeasance and negligent performance of duty on the part of Whiteman for which both White-man and the corporation would be liable. The petition discloses no liability against the corporation that did not exist against Whiteman and consequently if White-man had been acquitted of negligence, the corporation defendant would have escaped also as a matter of law, and, therefore, there was no separable controversy. [McGinnis v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 200 Mo. 347; Whiteaker v. Railroad, 252 Mo. 438. 439, 50.] We say this because the petition alleges that the manlift was “suddenly started and permitted to be suddenly started” through the negligence of both defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 988, 203 Mo. App. 432, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-larabee-flour-mills-corp-moctapp-1920.