Boesel v. Wells Fargo & Co.

169 S.W. 110, 260 Mo. 463, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 126
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 110 (Boesel v. Wells Fargo & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boesel v. Wells Fargo & Co., 169 S.W. 110, 260 Mo. 463, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 126 (Mo. 1914).

Opinions

FARIS, J.

— This case coming into Banc from Division Two, we adopt with some minor emendations, the statement thereof made by Roy, 0., who wrote the opinion in Division. It runs thus:

Suit for damages for personal injuries. Verdict and judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals.

The defendant had its bam at the northeast corner of Johnson and Spruce streets in St. Louis. It fronts south on Spruce. It is 75 feet front by 175 feet deep.- The office, is on the first floor in the southeast corner. That floor is used for vehicles. At the north end of the building is a freight elevator about thirteen feet by nine. It is operated by wire cables. Across the south opening to the elevator is a wooden removable bar about three feet high. Near the elevator begins a chute by which horses are taken to and from the stalls on the second floor. Hay and other feed is kept on the third floor. Near the foot of the chute [467]*467is an extension bell from the telephone, which rings whenever'there is a call on the telephone. As the elevator passes through the second floor there is a space of about two inches between the edge of the elevator and the side of the opening in the floor. John Hodgson was the foreman in charge of the barn.

The plaintiff lived with her párents in the property adjoining the bam on the west. The plaintiff Yas injured on August 19, 1909, and was fifteen years old in December following. The injury occurred between five and six o’clock in the afternoon. Plaintiff testified as to what occurred between her and Hodgson and as to how the injury occurred, as follows:

“I was called into the building by John Hodgson; he was the stable boss; bossed the men and worked some himself. He was working for the Wells Fargo Express Company.
“Q. What did he say to you? A. He told me if I would answer the telephone he would pay me for it.
“Q. Now, tell what he said and what you said on this occasion? A. He called me into the office in the stable and asked me if I would answer the telephone ; I told him yes, and asked him how much he would give me; he said he would pay me to-night. He said he was going up to the third floor to get some sacks to clean the chute out with, and told me if a call came in to use the elevator and not to go up the-chute, because he was afraid the horses would kick üie, and then a call came for him and I went and used the elevator. When a call came for him I got on the elevator. That was after he told me he was going to the third floor. When I got on the elevator, I pulled the wire that made the elevator go up; I went pretty near to the third floor. Then I was called down and I came down to the bar. My little brother called me down, and when I got down I stopped the elevator there. When I got down I put my leg over the bar. That bar was about three feet [468]*468above the floor. My brother was in the chute at the time he called, bnt before I got down he went ont of the chute and went on the second floor; I did not get off the elevator at all. Then I started to the second floor to get John Hodgson. As I went up my leg got caught .between the elevator and the second floor and was crushed. The elevator does not fit close against the second floor. There is a space between them; I couldn’t just exactly tell how wide it was. It looked as though it would be wide enough for my leg to go through without hitting or touching the floor at all. The elevator got past the second floor and my little brother stepped in after I got my leg back on the elevator. My knee was dragged between the elevator and the second floor. My mother ran over and helped me out of the building. My little brother took me back to the first floor on the elevator. . . .
“ Q. Now, state whether or not you were ever paid for the afternoon for answering the telephone at the time you were hurt? A. Yes, sir; John Hodgson paid me a quarter. I had answered the telephone before the 19th of August. I answered it before when asked to by John Hodgson. I was paid for answering it on those occasions for about three months. I did not answer it steadily every day. Just whenever I was called in there. I did not know how to operate the elevator. John Hodgson told me how, not very long after he had told me to answer the telephone.”

On cross-examination the plaintiff testified as follows :

“The movement of the elevator was regulated solely and entirely by these wires, to the best of my knowledge. They were the only wires I knew of. I operated it time and again by those two wires, and had seen other people operate it by them. I never saw anybody operate it in any other way. Those wires were not quite touching the wall. When Mr. Hodgson explained to me how to operate the elevator I tried to [469]*469see if I could do it; I did it all right. I learned in a very short time how to operate it . Prom that time on to the time I was hurt, I operated the elevator by those wires at least one hundred times. In operating the elevator at least one hundred times I never before this time sat down on the elevator; that was the first time. In operating the elevator before, I had passed' the second floor and gone up toward the third floor at times. I knew there was a crack between the south edge of the elevator and the second floor. I had seen it often as I went up by it. It was light at the time I was operating it, ... I heard a call way down at the south end of the building; then I got on the elevator which was way up in the north end of the building, and pulled the wire and started it; I was standing-up then. ... I went up to the second floor and got almost to the third floor. I didn’t see Mr. Hodgson on the third floor. There are horses and stalls all through on the second floor. They are on the side of the elevator. Closed ones' are higher than me, and those open are not. Those on the side I don’t think are higher than me. I didn’t go up to the third floor so I could see over the stalls. I thought he was on the third floor; he told me before he was going up to the third- floor to get the sacks, and I started up to the third floor. He went up to the third floor on the elevator. When I went up there to call him I found he was down on the ground. I didn’t know where he was. I never did find out. My little brother called me to come down and I went through the space again between the second floor and the elevator. . . My little brother was standing right by the elevator when he called me and told me that Hodgson had gone up to the second floor. I don’t know how long it took me to find him when I started upstairs, or how long it would take to run the elevator from the ground floor almost to the third floor. When I found that Mr. Hodgson had gone up the chute to the second floor I pulled [470]*470the wire again with my leg over the bar. I knew that if T pulled one wire that it would send the elevator up, and if I pulled the other wire it would send it down. . . . I was sitting on the elevator with my leg over the bar when I started up and the side of my leg rubbed the bar. When I got up to the second floor I stepped on the elevator, and that is the first time in over a hundred times that I operated the elevator that I had ever gone up with my leg over it. When I got up to the second floor the outside of my left knee was hurt. I had not changed my position at all. I sat right on '¿he elevator going up'. My leg just from the knee was hanging over. I don’t know how it was done, but it scraped through.

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 110, 260 Mo. 463, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boesel-v-wells-fargo-co-mo-1914.