Cathey Ex Rel. Brown v. De Weese

289 S.W.2d 51, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 638
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 12, 1956
Docket45055
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 289 S.W.2d 51 (Cathey Ex Rel. Brown v. De Weese) 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
Cathey Ex Rel. Brown v. De Weese, 289 S.W.2d 51, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 638 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

BARRETT, Commissioner.

In this action against his employers for damages for the loss of his left leg while operating a hay baler, a jury returned a verdict of $15,000 in favor of Leon Cathey, a farm hand then seventeen years and five months old. But the trial court sustained the defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and Leon, by his grandmother as guardian, prosecutes this appeal from the final judgment in favor of the defendants. Thus the question upon the entire transcript is whether, viewing the evidence favorably to Leon, reasonable minds could differ in the drawing of inferences as to the defendants’ negligence or as to Leon’s contributory negligence and whether he assumed the risk of injury. Wilson v. White, Mo.App., 272 S.W.2d 1, 7; Crandall v. McGilvray, Mo., 270 S.W.2d 793, 798. In so viewing the evidence favorably to Leon it must be borne in mind that the trial court in ruling upon the motion was not at liberty to draw inferences of fact favorably to the defendants “to countervail either presumptions of law or inferences of fact in favor of the plaintiff.” Evans v. General Explosives Co., 293 Mo. 364, 375, 239 S.W. 487, 491.

The background of this litigation is that Mr. DeWeese and his son-in-law, Nelson Tripp, were engaged in the business of farming about 1,200 acres of land in T.irm and Chariton counties on the crop-share basis, and in crop season employed two or three farm hands. The latter part of *53 March 1952 they employed Leon, at a wage of thirty dollars a week plus room and board, to do general farm work. He had worked on farms intermittently since he was thirteen and in 1952 quit school after finishing the ninth grade and started to work for the defendants, apparently on a rather permanent basis. Before he started operating the hay baler he had done some "plowing, disking or spreading fertilizer, any number of things that go along with general farm work.” He had driven trucks and operated tractors but he had not previously operated a “power take-off” tractor-drawn hay baler. The baler upon which he was injured was a “power take-off” tractor-drawn Allis Chalmers roll type baler about one year old. Photographs and descriptions of similar type machines involving somewhat comparable mishaps and injuries to adult employees will be found in Allis Chalmers Mfg. Co. v. Wichman, 8 Cir., 220 F.2d 426 and Yaun v. Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co., 253 Wis. 558, 34 N.W.2d 853.

At the start of the haying season, about the first of June and three weeks prior to his injury, the son-in-law, Tripp, undertook to instruct Leon how to operate the baler, “he stayed with me for a while to show me the best he could how to operate it.” The extent of Tripp’s knowledge and expertness does not appear but the instruction consisted in Tripp’s making “three or four rounds around the field,” Leon riding the tractor with him and observing. Then Tripp rode for three or four rounds with Leon operating the tractor and baler. In giving specific instructions Tripp said, “Well, on learning to operate it he said the best way to learn the same way he did would be to operate it and^ if something happened look around for what was wrong and try to fix it if you could and if it was something you couldn’t fix, why, to get hold of him.” As to whether there were any further specific' instructions Leon said, “Well, I don’t remember whether he ever named any specific thing or not, parts of the baler, but he told me how if it got balled up, hay got balled up to reverse the machine, run it back out, or it got to sticking in it, something like that, and, of course, lie showed me how to string the string and how to put the ball of twine in, tie it on properly so it wouldn’t catch or something like tliat.” Tripp, in describing Leon’s learning how to operate the baler, said, “Yes, I explained it to him. Well, in fact, he rode around with me and I explained as we went along. I drove slow the first round or two and I explained the operation, what happened, how to stop it. After we made a couple of rounds or so like that he took it and drove it and he drove slow and I rode with him and he seemed to understand, to catch on pretty quick how it worked.” Thus Leon had his first instruction and learned to operate the “power take-off” hay baler.-

For the greater part of the next three weeks, but not continuously, Leon operated the hay baler unassisted. He encountered, however, numerous vexing difficulties. He said, “Well, sir, I was off and on it all the time, biggest part of the time for various things, like the string breaking, and, oh, not tieing the bale or sticking, just kicking the hay out without tieing it or folding it into the bale.” But, whatever the difficulty, “I would fix it if I could if nothing too big,” and if he couldn’t fix it himself he waited until Mr, Tripp got there. Beneath the tie arm there was a flat metal strip which operated as a stop for the forward movement of the arm. The stop broke or failed to function and Mr. Tripp made a new stop from a flat piece of iron and repaired the functioning of the tie arm but that was not the cause of Leon’s injuries and, according to the defendants, there was no mechanical defect in the baler. Mr. DeWeese, in describing the difficulties encountered in operating the baler, said that it had given no trouble “so far as workmanship. There is always things you encounter with this type baler that can cause some trouble which doesn’t necessarily mean that there is anything mechanically wrong. A windrow scattered or one too closely raked together, for some reason or other your string fails to catch in the bale, won’t properly function. There is a lot of things can happen that will seem you are having a good deal of trouble on certain days, yet, mechanically there is nothing wrong with the baler particularly.” Tripp *54 said, “It was in good condition. I run it that morning over in there and I was having I expect about the same trouble he was. The hay was thin in places, thick in others, damp, rolled up there, be heavy on one side and you get a one sided bale but big. Well, that would cause you a little trouble, wouldn’t be enough hay there to catch your string and wind blowing. Just mostly hay conditions was about all the trouble.”

On the morning of June twenty-fifth Leon said that he started in the field just across the road from the house “and the hay rather soggy and wet, weedy and I was off of the baler more than on, stopped about all the time, and I told Mr. DeWeese and he told me, I believe it was after dinner, I went over in the other field but he said to take it in the other field (because the hay was lighter) and to get along as best I could because he wanted to get that done.” But over in this field “it kept up various things it had been doing in the other field, and, of course, I got along the best I could and then kept repairing small things that would happen and then (about three o’clock in the afternoon) the tie arm, that’s the name I gave it, I don’t know what the real name is, came down and it was supposed to kick out the bale whenever it come down, cut the string and kick the bale out

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W.2d 51, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cathey-ex-rel-brown-v-de-weese-mo-1956.