Coy v. D. H. Dean & Marblehead Lime Co.

4 S.W.2d 835, 222 Mo. App. 67, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 152
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 835 (Coy v. D. H. Dean & Marblehead Lime 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
Coy v. D. H. Dean & Marblehead Lime Co., 4 S.W.2d 835, 222 Mo. App. 67, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 152 (Mo. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

— This is an action in damages for personal injury. Defendants Daniel IT. Dean and J. B. ITaneock were jointly engaged as contractors and builders in the construction of a school building in Hannibal, Missouri, and plaintiff was in their employ as a common laborer.

In the process of constructing said school building an amount of crushed stone was used. This material was purchased from the other defendant the Marblehead Lime Company, a corporation, which operated a stone crusher near Hannibal. The accident and injury on which this action is based is alleged to have occurred on September 28, 1925.

The petition charges negligence of defendants Dean and Hancock in this: That plaintiffs and a negro driver named Conley were using a truck for the purpose of hauling rock from the crusher of defendant Lime Company to the said building and that Conley, the operator of said truck, suddenly, violently and without reasonable warning to plaintiff, started his said truck forward “when he knew of plaintiff’s position in said truck and that plaintiff would: likely he thrown and injured by such negligence and motion of said truck;” that the operator of said truck was further negligent “in that he started said truck forward in a manner so sudden and violent that it was likely to and did cause plaintiff to be so thrown and injured.” That defendants Dean and Hancock were also negligent in that the brakes on said truck were insecure and would not hold'or control said truck while being loaded; and the driver thereof had to keep the machinery engaged to hold said truck while being loaded and thereby said truck would be caused to start more suddenly and jerk more violently, and he more likely to cause injury to plaintiff.

The negligence charged against the Marblehead Lime Company is that it carelessly and negligently allowed and permitted one of its rock cars in which rock is carried from their quarry to their crusher to get loose and rush down “with great speed and creating frightening noises, and to have a violent collision with certain portions, of said bin or structure and cause great wreckage, a loud and terrifying noise, causing fright to persons below and causing them to believe that they were in great danger of being crushed or injured; and by reason thereof, the driver of said truck caused it to be suddenly started forward without reasonable warning to plaintiff, and plaintiff was violently thrown backwards against portions of said1 truck and injured.” This defendant is charged with further negligence in that it caused the tram car to leave the track and fall into portions of said structure and wreck part of said structure, creating terrific and terrifying noises, thus leading persons below to believe they were in great danger of being crushed, or killed, or injured, and by reason *70 thereof the driver suddenly set said truck in violent motion, without reasonable warning and caused the injury to plaintiff; that defendant Lime Company knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have known that such negligence would likely cause persons below to be injured. That “the negligence of defendants herein operated severally in causing plaintiff to be so thrown in said truck, and that by reason thereof” he was injured.

The separate amended answer of defendants Dean and Hancock is a general denial; and as affirmative defense pleads contributory negligence in that plaintiff failed, to heed warning given him in ample time to have avoided the injury; that plaintiff and William Conley the driver of the truck were fellow servants engaged in a common employment. The separate amended answer of defendant, the Marblehead Lime Company, is a general denial, and as affirmative defense pleads that plaintiff and the driver were fellow servants, neither exercising any authority over the other, and that plaintiff’s injuries, if any, were caused by the act of a fellow servant. The answer also pleads contributory negligence in that- plaintiff failed and refused to heed a warning given him in ample time to have avoided, the injury. The reply is a. general denial. There was a verdict and judgment, against both defendants in the sum of $3500. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were unavailing and defendants have appealed.

The facts developed are that the crusher building of the Marble-head Lime Company where the alleged injury occurred is located on a hillside near the city of Hannibal and the quarry is nearby. The main building faces approximately east and is about forty,feet square, the concrete walls thereof being twelve inches in thickness. The building is divided into four equal apartments, or bins, by concrete partition walls twelve inches in thickness. At right angles with the west wall and outside of the main building near its center is a small building, known as the “crusher shanty” which is twelve by fourteen feet in dimensions. Directly west of the crusher shanty is the hopper which extends some fifteen to twenty feet west of the crusher shanty. On three sides the hopper is of concrete with a concrete floor sloping to the floor of the crusher shanty. In the floor of the shanty is an opening into the crusher beneath the floor thereof. West from the west end of the crusher shanty and extending partly over the said hopper is the end track of a small railroad which leads up the hill, the ascending grade being about three to five per cent, to the quarry. The part of the track over the hopper is a.bout twenty feet above the hopper floor and about, thirty to forty feet from the main building. Over this track the cars are, run from the quarry and the rock so conveyed is dumped therefrom into the hopper. The quarry is about 325 feet southwest of the main buildings. The cars so used are small and the gross weight thereof when, loaded with rock is approximately 3500 pounds. The cars are loaded by hand in the quarry and pulled *71 therefrom by a horse; the horse is then detached and a cable, controlled at the mouth of the quarry, is attached. On the date of the alleged injury one of these cars unattached to the cable ran down .the incline to the end of the track, fell on the elevator shanty, crashed through it and lodged on the elevator belt located outside and west of the main building. This metallic elevator belt extended from beneath the crusher which is under the elevator shanty up at an angle of about forty-five degrees, and a “lean to” covered with rubberoid, or prepared roofing, ivas constructed for protection to the elevator belt.

It appears in evidence that one White, while in the act of hooking said ear to the cable, was struck on the head and dazed by a falling-stone andi therefore failed to hook the cable to the car. The car was automatically detached from the horse and ran by gravity down the track and plunged into the elevator shanty, as above stated, with a loud and frightening noise. Testifying for plaintiff at the trial White ivas allowed to state, over the objection of defendants, that the rock which struck him came from the top of the loaded car; that he decided it came from the top of the car because “there was- no other place for it to come from.” The admission of this evidence is assigned as error. This witness further stated that he did not know how the car was loaded as he did not observe it. The point is not briefed, however, and we may consider it abandoned.

At the time of the accident the crusher with all the machinery ivas in operation with its attendant noise and rock was being crushed and distributed to points in the main building.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 835, 222 Mo. App. 67, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coy-v-d-h-dean-marblehead-lime-co-moctapp-1928.