Cagney v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad

69 Mo. 416
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 69 Mo. 416 (Cagney v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad) 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
Cagney v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, 69 Mo. 416 (Mo. 1879).

Opinion

Napton, J.

This suit was brought in February, 1876. The ground of action stated in the petition is, that the plaintiff was employed in defendant’s car shops at Hannibal ; that he was ordered by the foreman to get out door head circles on a shaping machine ; that it was no paid of his duty to do work on this shaping machine; that the defendant knowingly, carelessly and negligently furnished him with a machine and pattern both of which were imperfect and dangerous; that the machine was without a fender or guard, and the pattern was single when it ought to have been double; and, consequently, that plaintiff, while carefully and unaware of the danger, was working out door head circles, he was, through this disregard of duty on the part of defendant, wounded and bruised on his left hand to such an extent as rendered necessary the amputation of the first three fingers; to his damage $3,000.

As to the facts in this case there is no conflict in the evidence. It appears that the plaintiff had been working in the shop of defendant for six years, mostly as a sawyer on a circular saw, but by reason of the discharge of a good many workmen, he was engaged by Mr. Shed, the superintendent, to work in the shop, generally, at the wages he had been before receiving, and at his own request was allowed by Mr. Davis, the foreman, to work on this shaping machine, with the use of which he was desirous of becoming familiar. Mr. Davis gave him all the instructions he could, advised him that it was a dangerous machine and required great care, and did the most difficult jobs or. it himself. The machine was without a guard; but the testimony of all the raiiroad officials who had superintended or worked in such shops was that they were not used any where in this State; nor was there any proof to show that they were used elsewhere, although they had been tried at Moberly, and in the shops of the Kansas Pacific, in the [420]*420State of Kansas, and been discarded or disused. In regard to the use of a single or double former, the evidence was clear that the latter was safer, when the work admitted of its use at all, as was the case on the piece the plaintiff’ was engaged on when hurt; but it was equally clear that the job upon which plaintiff was engaged could be safely done on a single former. The former, in this case, was handed to plaintiff by Mr. Corrigan, who was superintendent of the shop or cabinet in which such tools were made. It had been used by plaintiff' on exactly such jobs as he was engaged in when he was hurt; and the job left unfinished by plaintiff in consequence of his hurt, was finished on a single former. After the accident, which disabled plaintiff for several weeks, during which his name was not stricken from the pay-roll of employees, he returned to work on the same machine, and continued to work on it eighteen months, and until a month or so before this suit was brought.

Two grounds were relied on by plaintiff for holding the defendant liable. One was that the machine upon which plaintiff' was put to work was without a fender or guard. The other was that a single former was furnished him, instead of a double one.

The instructions to the jury on these points, or rather on the first point alone, were as follows : 1. “ The jury are instructed that, while it is true that the defendant was not required to adopt every possible improvement in its machinery, yet it was bound to keep sufficient and safe machinery, and to adopt suitable instruments for its servants who worked upon the same, and if defendant could have provided for these by the use of ordinary care and foresight, and at a reasonable cost, then, if it failed to do so, it was guilty of a breach of duty and is liable for the consequences; and. in this case if you believe from the evidence that plaintiff, while in the employ of defendant, lost the first three fingers of his left hand by means of a shaping machine furnished by defendant, and that said machine did not have a fender or guard, and that it was unsafe and [421]*421defective by reason thereof, and that defendant knew thereof, or might have known thereof by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, and that defendant might have procured said guard or fender at small expense, then defendant is liable to plaintiff for said injury, provided you believe he received the same because of said machine not having such fender or guard; providing you believe that the plaintiff did not know at the time he was injured that there was such a thing as a fender or guard to that kind of a machine. 2. Even if the jury should believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence or carelessness which contributed to the injury, yet if they further believe from the evidence that the defendant might have avoided said injury by the use of ordinary care, caution and foresight in furnishing plaintiff with safe machinery and instrumentalities upon which to perform the work on which he was engaged, and that such want of care, caution and foresight was the direct or proximate cause of said injury, then the jury will find for the plaintiff.”

When the first instruction is examined, in connection with the testimony on which -it was based, or ought to have been based, the objections to it are apparent. There was no testimony to show that this shaping machine was a defective one, without a guard, but that a guard was an additional security against negligence or possible accidents. These guards, it appears, had been abandoned in shops of this character where they had been tried, for the reason that some work had to be done where they could not be used, and their occasional use on such jobs as admitted their use had a tendency to make the workmen more careless, and they were, therefore, discarded as upon the whole disadvantageous. They were used at the sash and blind factory of Mr. Lovejoy, at Kansas City, and the proprietor considered them a great security on such work as he had to do; but all the witnesses who were connected with such shops as the plaintiff' was employed in, agreed that they were either unknown or untried; or, if tried, had been aban[422]*422doned. They were not used in any shop in this State, although they had been tried at Moberly; and the foreman of the Kansas Pacific railroad at Armstrong, in Kansas, testified that he -had been nineteen years at the business, and that such guards were very seldom used ; that he had tried them and discontinued their use, preferring to run the machine without a guard. But the instruction, disclaiming the doctrine that the defendant was bound to adopt every new invention, at. the same time declares that safe machinery was necessary, which term safe is rather an equivocal one in this connection. If by this we are to understand that the machine must not be dangerous, then it is clear from all the evidence, both of plaintiff and defendant, that neither the shaping machine nor the circular saw, nor probably various other machines in this shop, complied with this requisite. The plaintiff was told that the machine on which he asked permission to work was a dangerous one, and, doubtless, considering that he had been six years at work in the same shop, knew it himself.

The instruction is also objectionable in leaving to the jury a question upon which the evidence was altogether on one side, and on which the hypothesis necessary to sustain a verdict for the plaintiff’ was entirely without evidence to support it. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Mo. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cagney-v-hannibal-st-joseph-railroad-mo-1879.