Buckner v. Stock Yards Horse & Mule Co.

120 S.W. 766, 221 Mo. 700, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 170
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 766 (Buckner v. Stock Yards Horse & Mule 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
Buckner v. Stock Yards Horse & Mule Co., 120 S.W. 766, 221 Mo. 700, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 170 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This is an action for personal injuries. Plaintiff was an employee of defendant, which is a Missouri corporation engaged in the business of a commission merchant, buying and selling horses and mules. In its said business the defendant was using a certain barn in Kansas City, Missouri, known by it as barn “C,” which barn extended from Cenessee street on the east to Bell street on the west. Through said barn from east to west was an alley twelve feet wide and upon either side thereof were pens in which horses and mules were kept, fed and watered. This alley way had a board floor, and these pens opened in such alley way by means of gates, which gates were in length about the width of said alley way, and swung out into said alley way, so that when the gate of the pen was opened it might be used, if desired, to close the alley way. On the south side of the alley were what were known as pens No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3, No. 1 being at the east end of this alley way and going west followed No. 2 and No. 3 in order. The gate to said pen No. 2 could be opened so that it would close the passage way of' said alley way so as to prevent the horses coming out of said pen from going eastward to the street on the east of the barn. At the time of the accident, plaintiff was removing some horses from [704]*704pen No. 2 to pen No. 3, the said pen No. 3 being on the south side of the alley way, and the first pen to the west of No. 2 as above indicated. To do so- the east end of the alley way would be closed by the opening of the gate to pen No. 2, and of course the gate to pen No. 3, which swung back east in said alley way, would have to be open and the horses driven out of pen No. 2 through said alley way to pen No. 3. The negligence charged in the petition is in this language:

“That it was the duty of defendant to keep said gates and alley in a reasonably safe condition for the purposes aforesaid, but plaintiff states that said defendant negligently and carelessly failed to perform said duty in this, to-wit: That the floor of said alley was at the time of said injury and for a long time prior thereto had beén in a defective, dilapidated and unsafe condition, the boards thereof were broken and rotten and the surface was uneven and portions thereof about the gate into which said horses were to be driven were raised up so that said gate could not be fully opened and swung back against said pens, but when opened as far as possible projected out into said alley and left a space between said gate and pens into which the said horses might rush when being driven from one pen to another.

“The plaintiff in transferring said horses opened said gate as far as the same would go; and while in the act of taking a position beyond the said gate to turn the horses therein, the said horses rushed into the space between the said gates and said pens and threw said gate with great force and violence around and against the plaintiff, knocking him down and permanently injuring him.”

Damages were alleg-ed in the sum of $10,845, which included $325 for medical attendance and $520 for loss of earnings. There was a second count but this was dismissed and need not be noticed further.

[705]*705Answer was a general denial, plea of contributory negligence and a plea of assumption of risk. Reply, general denial.

Plaintiff had verdict and judgment for $5,000, from which judgment defendant, after an unsuccessful motion for new trial, has appealed.

The evidence in the case discloses about this state of facts. On June 1st and for a long time prior thereto defendant had the plaintiff in its employ. Defendant was continuously receiving horses and mules for sale, which came from all sections of the country. Plaintiff was what is sometimes denominated a “straw boss” and under the evidence he was strictly such, if in fact he reached that altitude in the scale. It appears that he did see that the men in defendant’s employ around their said barn “ C ” worked, and he worked with them. At times he was alone there and at times he had other men with him. One J. C. Endieott was the foreman for defendant and visited this and other bams belonging to defendant practically every day. Pie said the duties of the plaintiff were to water, feed and curry the horses, place them around in the barn “and kind of keep the men that I (Endieott) had under him working down there busy.” This witness also said that if anything got out of shape plaintiff was expected to fix it up if he could, and if not, to report it to' him.

Mr. Wolcott, vice-president of defendant, said plaintiff was not expected to make repairs; that his business was to take care of the horses; that Endieott was their general foreman and hired and discharged the men, and that Endieott had the right to give orders to Buckner, the plaintiff; that he knew of the condition of the gate only in a general way; that looking after the condition of the gate was supposed to be done by the foreman. Endieott was made a witness [706]*706by plaintiff and Wolcott by the defendant. Other evidence tended to show that plaintiff had nothing to do with repairs, bnt that he was expected to report sneh things to the foreman, and that there was a gang of carpenters at the stock yards who made repairs. Snch is the testimony of plaintiff relative to defendant and the barn in question.

It was shown that this alley way floor was made of planks running cross-wise, which planks were two or three inches thick and twelve inches wide. That they had become badly rotted and worn near the-center of the alley way, with holes and broken places therein. That they had been in such condition for a long time prior to said June 1, 1901, the date of the accident to plaintiff; that by reason of such condition the ends of such planks next to the south side of the alley way had become so elevated as to preclude the gates from going clear back to the fence when the same were opened; that these gates had hooks upon them for the purpose of fastening them to the alley way fence when opened in full, thus preventing horses from getting between the end of the gate and the fence, and when opened half way for the purpose of closing the alley way these hooks would catch in a staple on the opposite side.

It also- appears that plaintiff had full knowledge of these conditions and had notified the foreman Endicott thereof and that Endicott had promised to have the same repaired.

The night before the accident defendant had received a lot of western horses, which were somewhat wild — the receipt of such character of horses was not an unusual occurrence, however. These horses had been placed- in pen No. 2 and when the owner of the horses came down the next morning he asked plaintiff to divide them and place a part in another pen. Plaintiff had no help that morning and declined to do so, whereupon the owner went to the foreman, [707]*707Endicott, and renewed Ms demand. Endicott then went to barn “C” and directed plaintiff to pnt a part of the horses into pen No. 3. Under this direction from his foreman he attempted to divide and remove the horses. He opened the gate of pen No. 3, and pushed it to the east as far as it would go, hut owing to the elevated condition of the ends of the hoards, could not get it closer than five or six feet of the fence, to which it ought to have been fastened; after he had thus opened the gate, he requested a horse buyer who was present to open the gate of pen No. 2, so that the horses would come out and he, plaintiff, started to the west to turn them into the gate way of pen No. 3; whilst so doing the horses rushed out

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120 S.W. 766, 221 Mo. 700, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckner-v-stock-yards-horse-mule-co-mo-1909.