Crandall v. McGilvray

270 S.W.2d 793, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 749
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 13, 1954
Docket43928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 270 S.W.2d 793 (Crandall v. McGilvray) 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
Crandall v. McGilvray, 270 S.W.2d 793, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 749 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

DALTON, Presiding Judge.

Action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff when the fingers of his right hand were caught in the husking rollers of a mechanical corn picker he was operating for his employer, 'the defendant.

The cause was tried to a jury and submitted on defendant’s alleged negligence in failing to warn plaintiff of certain dangers connected with the operation of the corn picker, which dangers were alleged to have been known to defendant but unknown to plaintiff. Contributory negligence was pleaded and submitted as a defense. Verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff for $15,000 but, thereafter, the trial court sustained defendant’s after trial motion to set the verdict and judgment aside and to enter judgment for defendant in accordance with defendant’s motion for a directed verdict as offered at the close of all the evidence. Judgment was entered for defendant and plaintiff has appealed.

Plaintiff had been employed by defendant as a general farm hand on defendant’s farm since 1946. The injury was sustained on November 27, 1951 and this action was instituted about a year later. Plaintiff was 32 years of age and had been engaged in farm and construction work most of his life. He had also worked as a mechanic and had overhauled motors and farm equipment. He could operate “all kinds of farm machinery,” including cultivators, discs, plows and mowing machines, all pulled by tractors, and also combines and bulldozers or “any kind of machinery.” He had operated a combine with a motor mounted on it and was familiar with that operation. He had operated a tractor with a power take off and knew that it turned all the time, “unless you shut it off”; and that the power could be shut off and the tractor motor left running. In 1939, he had operated a McCormick-Dude mechanical corn picker, pull type, mounted with two rollers and operated by a tractor. He received no in *795 •structions at that time with reference to its use or any safety precautions.

Plaintiff had first worked for defendant at the McGilvray Elevator, hauling corn, grinding feed and scooping grain. In the fall of 1951, defendant instructed him to operate the corn picker in question, which defendant had purchased a few years before. It was a Wood Brothers picker and was to be operated with defendant’s International Farmall tractor. The tractor was equipped with a power take off, with a clutch to disengage the power take off. You could shut off the power and leave the tractor motor still running. Plaintiff had operated machinery of this kind before. Defendant’s corn picker was similar in operation to the one plaintiff had operated in 1939, “except the two rollers, mounted type.” It had snapping rollers and an elevator to carry the ears of corn up to the husking rollers. The husking rollers were about the same kind as defendant’s. The rollers operated at about the same high speed. Plaintiff knew in general how the picker he had used in 1939 operated when the tractor was running. After the ears of corn were snapped off, the machine elevated them into the shucking bed where the shucks were removed, the rollers pulling the shuck down below, the ears remaining on top back in the elevator arrangement. Defendant’s Wood Brothers corn picker operated practically the same way. Only after the shuck was taken off the ears of corn, the ears rolled on down into the elevator. Plaintiff “knew how to operate it,” but he didn’t know how to “hook it up” and get the drive shaft adjusted to the right height. Hooking it up didn’t have anything to do with the operation of the rollers. Plaintiff, however, told defendant he knew nothing about a corn picker of the Wood Brothers type. Defendant told plaintiff that all he would have to do would be to try it, as any fool could learn to operate it. Since neither plaintiff nor defendant knew how to hook up the corn picker to a tractor, they went to another farmer for information and then came back and hooked up the corn picker and tractor. Plaintiff “put the shield on it” and they went to the field and began operation. Defendant went with plaintiff for about three hours and while eight or ten loads of corn were gathered, but defendant gave plaintiff no instructions at all about how to operate the corn picker. He did tell him to be careful and to learn to run it. While defendant was with him, plaintiff saw how the picker operated and that the rollers ran at the same high speed as the other picker.

Plaintiff continued to operate the tractor and picker alone the remainder of the first day and, later on second and third days without difficulty, but on the fourth day, after about three hours, the picker stopped, the wheels slid and the tractor kept running. Plaintiff “shut the tractor off” to see what was wrong and found that he had run into a duck blind made of stalks and 12 to 15 feet of 28 inch hog wire fencing, the wire caught in the snapping rollers. He took pliers and cut out the wire and thought he had it fixed. He “shut the power off” to take the hog wire out because he knew “if you got the obstruction out the thing would start up.” He figured that if he “left it still connected up and removed the obstruction it would start moving.” After removing the wire he started the tractor again, but the corn stalks continued to pile up in the snapping rollers. He then left the tractor motor in operation, the power take off intact, hooked up, with the power take off moving, but the picker was not running. He had started the tractor ahead but the picker “wouldn’t pick any corn.” He “didn’t know anything was caught in it.” He said that he left the tractor running and connected up because he had to see what was the matter, that is, to help locate the trouble. If he shut off the motor he could not find out what was the matter. He was going to shut off the motor after he found what the trouble was. He admitted that if he had shut off the motor he could have seen and found the trouble; that by generally checking over the machine you could see where it was broken, but it would have taken longer, probably an hour or an hour and a half.

He inspected the husking rollers, two sets of them, one steel and one rubber. He said *796 the purpose of the rollers wa's to take the husks off the corn and that they operated fast, at a “pretty good speed,” but when he inspected these rollers, they were stopped and motionless and he “saw a stob sticking up there.” At one time he said he didn’t think it was the trouble, but later he said he did think the stob was stopping the machine. It was just sticking up in the husking bed. He could see about ten inches of the stob. He didn’t see the end that was down, he thought it was just standing there. It was standing up next to the fiat metal shield around the husking rollers, right toward the bin, leaning a little. It was standing alone. “I saw the rollers but I didn’t see the end of the stick, I mean the end that was down like that, the wire was sticking up above them.” “Q. Why did you take it out? A. I don’t know. Q. You knew if you did remove anything that was stopping it up the machine would start running? A. Yes, sir.” Later, he said that he did not know that these rollers could start up again if the stob was disturbed; and that, when he stepped upon the frame to look down upon the husking rollers, he could not see the rollers on account of the corn on top of them, the corn “could not elevate out” because the rollers had already stopped. He could not see the lower end of the stob which was sticking up out of the corn.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W.2d 793, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crandall-v-mcgilvray-mo-1954.