Boll v. Condie-Bray Glass & Paint Co.

11 S.W.2d 48, 321 Mo. 92, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 861
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 4, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 48 (Boll v. Condie-Bray Glass & Paint 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
Boll v. Condie-Bray Glass & Paint Co., 11 S.W.2d 48, 321 Mo. 92, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 861 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*95 GENTRY, J.

This case comes to us on appeal from the action of the circuit court in sustaining a demurrer to the evidence of appellant on both counts of his petition. The case is somewhat unusual in that appellant asked damages from respondent on two separate and distinct causes of action, each one due to alleged negligence and each resulting in personal injuries which he sustained.

*96 In the first count, appellant alleged that respondent operated a paint manufacturing establishment in the city of St. Louis and used in connection therewith a freight elevator, and that appellant was employed by respondent as a laborer in connection with the handling of freight in said elevator, working under respondent’s foreman, one Charles Nolte. Appellant alleged that he was directed by said foreman to remove from said elevator five barrels of lead, each weighing seven hundred pounds; that the floor of the elevator was some twelve or fourteen inches below the level of the first floor of the building, and that he complained to the foreman that the barrels of lead were too heavy for him to remove by himself, but that the Foreman failed to furnish him with an additional helper. It was then alleged that tk foreman directed appellant to remove the barrels by himself, that in trying to remove them from the elevator, relying on the superior knowledge of the foreman, appellant was ruptured, his back wrenched and his nervous system shattered. For such injuries, he asked damages in the sum of twenty thousand dollars. The answer to the first count consisted of a general denial.

Appellant offered medical evidence tending to show that he had been ruptured and that said rupture could have been brought about by an effort to lift or move a barrel of lead weighing seven hundred pounds. In testifying for himself, appellant said that there were five barrels of lead, each weighing seven hundred pounds, placed in the freight elevator in defendant’s paint factory on the day of his alleged injury, and that he was directed by respondent’s foreman, Nolte, to remove said barrels; that Nolte had charge of appellant and the other men who were employed by the respondent in its paint manufacturing establishment. Ylhen appellant discovered that the barrels of lead were in the elevator and that it was some twelve or fourteen inches below the level of the first floor, he complained to said foreman and asked for additional help. That the foreman replied, “Well, John, do the best you can. I ain’t got nobody up here to help you. I am up here by myself and you will have to do the same and try to get along by yourself.” Appellant testified that he further notified McClilligan, respondent’s superintendent, and asked for additional help to remove the barrels of lead; but that the superintendent replied, “I could pick up one of those and carry it around the block. You can get them off by yourself.” Appellant then did try to remove a barrel from the elevator by “seesawing” it back and forth on the elevator floor, and that he sustained the injury complained of, that he was treated at the hospital, incurred expenses, suffered as a result thereof, etc. As above stated, at the conclusion of appellant’s evidence the court sustained a demurrer to the first count of his petition.

*97 In the second count, appellant alleged that respondent was engaged in the paint manufacturing business in St. Louis, that he was employed as a laborer in connection with the elevator and general utility man, his duties being to carry bags of dry lead, dry paint, and dry whitening from the first to the second floor of said factory. On August 16, 1924, appellant claimed that he was overcome with fumes that arose from said dry lead, dry paint and dry whitening and dry zinc. The acts of negligence complained of consisted, first, of failure of respondent to provide appellant with a reasonably safe place in which to work; that there were mixers on defendant’s premises where dry lead, dry paint, dry zinc and dry whitening were placed in large quantities, causing poisonous gases, dust and fumes to be emitted and to arise therefrom in large and harmful quantities, and that respondent negligently failed to provide proper ventilators in said room on the second floor, where appellant was required to do part of his work. That by reason of such failure, the appellant came in contact with and inhaled fumes, gases and dust thrown off by said substances and received permanent injuries. Second, that respondent knew that the business in which it was engaged was dangerous to the health of persons who worked at said business, but negligently failed to take any precaution against the escaping of fumes, gases and dust. Third, that respondent knew that poisonous gases, fumes and dust in large and dangerous quantities were thrown off and escaped from said substances where appellant was required to work and knew that it was dangerous to the health and safety of appellant to inhale said gases, fumes and dust, and respondent negligently failed to provide a plan or means of removing or taking up said gases, fumes or dust from the room where appellant worked, and that appellant sustained serious and permanent injuries by reason thereof. Fourth, that respondent knew that the work in which appellant was engaged was such as to produce or cause appellant to suffer or be exposed to the diseases commonly known as lead poison, lead colic or painter’s colic and that respondent negligently failed to provide any devices, means or methods of preventing appellant from contracting such diseases, in violation of Section 6817, Revised Statutes 1919. Fifth, that respondent violated Section 6819, Revised Statutes 1919, by failing to provide appellant with a respirator that was in good condition, and failed to provide appellant with any sort of working clothes. Sixth, that respondent knew that appellant was an inexperienced workman about the place where powdered and dry paint, dry lead, dry zinc and dry whitening were handled but that the appellant was entirely ignorant of the danger from such -poisonous gases and fumes that arose and were thrown off from said ■substances; that the respondent negligently failed to warn appellant of the dánger to his health in working among said dangerous gases, *98 fumes and dust, thereby causing appellant to sustain serious and permanent injuries. Seventh, that respondent maintained its mixing machines without having' the same covered and without having an exhaust pipe thereon, while said substances were being mixed and that by reason thereof great and harmful quantities of dirt, dust and fumes were caused to arise therefrom, while said mixing machines could have been covered with an exhaust pipe without materially interfering with the operation of said machines and thereby prevented said large quantities of poisonous dust and gases from arising and injuring appellant. That by-reason of such negligence and failure, appellant, while in the performance of his duty, inhaled said poisonous dust, fumes and gases and sustained serious and permanent injuries. The petition then alleged that appellant suffered cramps and excruciating pains in his abdomen, that his ligaments and joints began to stiffen and weaken, and that he could not lift his arms and legs without suffering great pain and inconvenience. That by reason of all of which, appellant claimed damages in the sum of fifteen thousand dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 48, 321 Mo. 92, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boll-v-condie-bray-glass-paint-co-mo-1928.