Cabanne v. St. Louis Car Co.

161 S.W. 597, 178 Mo. App. 718, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 185
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 597 (Cabanne v. St. Louis Car Co.) 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
Cabanne v. St. Louis Car Co., 161 S.W. 597, 178 Mo. App. 718, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 185 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for damages accrued to pláintiff through the negligence of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

Defendant manufactures and sells automobiles, and plaintiff was in its employ as a demonstrator and salesman of its automobiles at the time of his injury. It appears plaintiff was demonstrating an automobile to a prospective purchaser when the steering gear of the machine separated and caused it to collide with a tree in Forest Park with such force as to demolish the automobile and throw plaintiff upon the earth so as to fracture his skull at the base of the brain.

It is argued, first, on the part of defendant, that the petition is insufficient to state a cause of action against defendant, in that it omits to aver defendant either knew or might have known of the defective steering gear attached to the automobile, but we are not so persuaded. Defendant seems to confuse the doctrine requiring the master to exercise ordinary care in the matter of construction and furnishing appliances, reasonably safe for the use of his servant, with that which obtains with respect to .appliances which, though reasonably safe when furnished, become defective thereafter.

No one can doubt that the master performs the full measure of his duty enjoined by the law when he exercises ordinary care to discover defects and furnishes the servant an appliance reasonably safe for [726]*726use. If, after the master has performed this duty of furnishing a reasonably safe appliance, it becomes defective while in use, no -recovery may be allowed as for a breach of the obligation with respect to that matter, unless it appears the master either knew, or by exercising ordinary care in that behalf might have known, of the defect for a sufficient length of time to remove it. [Mueller v. Shoe Co., 109 Mo. App. 506, 84 S. W. 1010.]

However, this rule is beside the case here, for no> complaint is made with respect to the failure of the master to perform his duty after the automobile was furnished to plaintiff, reasonably safe for the purposes of demonstration, but, on the contrary, the petition proceeds on the theory that defendant breached the obligation which the law cast against it to exercise ordinary care in furnishing plaintiff with an appliance —that is, an automobile — reasonably safe for use in demonstration, in that it furnished him an automobile with a defective steering apparatus which separated while running and occasioned his hurt.

The averment touching this matter is, “plaintiff further states that the injuries aforesaid sustained by plaintiff were the direct result of the negligence and carelessness of the defendant in furnishing him with a car with unsafe, dangerous and defective steering apparatus as aforesaid.” In other portions of the petition it is set forth that the sector lever, or, as some call it, the steering arm, separated from the tie link in the rod to which it was attached, and this, too, though the machine was apparently safe for use. The petition proceeds throughout upon the theory that defendant breached its obligation to exercise ordinary care in furnishing plaintiff a reasonably safe appliance.. Such being true, it is not essential to aver that defendant either knew or might have known of the defect by exercising ordinary care to that end, and an averment that the master negligently furnished the ap[727]*727pliance will suffice. [See Young v. Shickle, etc., Iron Co., 103 Mo. 324, 15 S. W. 771; Fassbinder v. Mo. Pac. R. Co., 126 Mo. App. 563, 104 S. W. 1154.]

It is urged the court should have peremptorily directed a verdict for defendant, but the argument is obviously without merit. The evidence tends to prove that the automobile furnished plaintiff was an old one, but had been overhauled by defendant and furnished to plaintiff as sufficient, and asserted to be in fine shape but a week or ten days Before. As before said, plaintiff was a demonstrator and salesman of automobiles for defendant. The automobile involved here was a large one and weighed about 3500 pounds, possession a minimum of fourteen horse power and a maximum of eighteen horsepower. It had been in the service of defendant about a year and a half, and was first used with a wagon body on it, for the purpose of hauling express, castings, etc. Afterwards it was equipped with a touring car body and plaintiff used it as a demonstrating car for some eight or ten months. About six weeks before plaintiff received his injury, he reported to the manager of defendant that there was a noise in the car designated as a “pound” and that it was unfit for demonstrating purposes and, furthermore, that it needed new chains. Defendant’s manager thereupon instructed plaintiff to send the car up to the factory and he would have it overhauled thoroughly and ‘ ‘ go all the way through it. ’ ’ The car was delivered to the factory to be overhauled and made as it should be. Defendant overhauled the car and furnished it to plaintiff about a week or ten days before his injury, to be used in demonstrating. Defendant’s manager assured plaintiff at that time that the car was in “fine shape.” Apparently the automobile was sufficient in all respects, but there was a defect thereabout in the steering gear, beneath the body of the car, which was concealed by means of a leather hood about the same.

[728]*728It appears the steering gear, which is connected with the steering wheel in the hands of the demonstrator, operates through the connection of a bar with a ball or knob on the end of it inserted in a slot in another bar. These two pieces of the machine are in evidence and are exhibited here through a call therefor in the bill of exceptions and by consent of the counsel. Exhibit “A” is a rod which was called a tie link and Exhibit “B” is known as a sector lever, mentioned, too, as the steering arm. The rod Exhibit “A” is hollow for about four inches from- each end and has a slot running along in the top of it for some distance from each end. The outer end of the hollow in the rod is closed by a nut. To fit the two parts together the nut is removed and the ball at the end of Exhibit “B” fitted closely into the hollow part of Exhibit “A,” the slender portion of Exhibit “B” above the ball extending up above the slot. These two parts appear to be much worn at their conjunction— that is to say, the ball or knob on the one is diminished in size by long use, and the slot in the other is made larger and extended through the same means. The evidence tends to prove that, because of this condition, the ball or knob slipped out from the slot and thus separated the steering gear of the machine beneath the body of the car while plaintiff was driving it at a rate of speed between fifteen and twenty miles an hour.

While the machine was thus moving at a rapid rate of speed, the wheels of the car refused to respond to the turn of the steering wheel held by plaintiff, and, indeed, he says the steering wheel moved around in his hands like a toy. Thereupon the automobile left the roadway and collided with a tree with such force as to demolish it and throw plaintiff and his customer both to the ground, inflicting the injuries upon plaintiff for which he sues. It appears, too, that one of the tires of the automobile exploded immediately before the collision or contemporaneously therewith or immediately [729]*729thereafter. A witness, some distance away, said he heard the explosion immediately prior to the collision, hut another witness said it was immediately after the collision of the automobile with the tree.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 597, 178 Mo. App. 718, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabanne-v-st-louis-car-co-moctapp-1913.