Craven v. Midland Milling Co.

241 S.W. 658, 209 Mo. App. 557, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 129
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 658 (Craven v. Midland Milling 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
Craven v. Midland Milling Co., 241 S.W. 658, 209 Mo. App. 557, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 129 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, P. J.

The controversy herein was before this court on appeal, at the October Term, 1920. See Craven v. Midland Milling Co., 228 S. W. 513, where the appeal was dismissed for plaintiff’s failure to bring *559 up all of the testimony when the only contention was that the court had erred in sustaining a demurrer to the evidence. It is now brought up on a writ of error.

Defendant runs a large milling establishment, eight stories high, the fourth floor of which is a large open room having therein a row of “roll machines” from which long pipes run up, together with such apparatus, as is necessary to convey the flour and milling material in the business. These “roll machines” are about six feet high, enclosed and box-shaped at the base, somewhat rolling at the top, and, at the front side about three feet from the floor, is a small metal door, about five inches wide and thirteen inches long. This door when closed is practically vertical, but when opened, or let down, it is horizontal. The machine does not rise perpendicularly from the top of the door when closed, but, at a point a few inches above the door, the front “bulges out” three or four inches and then slants back as it goes on up to the top of the machine.

Plaintiff, a woman 42 years of age, was employed on the third and fourth floors as a sweeper and as an oiler and cleaner of machinery.

On the morning of November 28,1918, plaintiff went to work as usual about 7:30 o’clock on the fourth floor as oiler and sweeper. She was dusting in the room, having an ordinary handled broom and a brush with a handle on it “like a lady would dust a room with.”

About 9 o’clock something about the mill broke necessitating the shutting down of the mill, and the machinery ceased running. Thereupon, plaintiff’s foreman told her to stop dusting, get a ladder and clean overhead pipes, fill oil cups and work above.

Plaintiff testified that she went down to the third floor, inquired there for a ladder but was unable to find one, and upon returning to the fourth floor, the foreman told her he thought she was at work and inquired why she wasn’t doing what he had directed; that she thereupon informed him she could not find a ladder. Ac *560 cording to her evidence, the foreman then ordered plaintiff to let down the door ou, the “roll machine” and stand upon that, and assured plaintiff it was sáfe for her to do so, and she promptly obeyed the order. Plaintiff say she “had all the confidence in what the foreman said;” that the foreman “seemed to be in a hurry, and was rather impatient and'anxious.” Plaintiff says she “put her knee on the door” and got up there. After getting her feet on the now horizontal door, she pulled her “ordinary handled broom” which was all she had, up to where she was, and, reaching up with it, made a stroke with the broom. As she did this, her feet slipped on the smooth, iron, inner or upper side 'of the door and she fell on the concrete floor striking- her ear against a hot radiator. She was severely burned, her wrist was broken, she was injured internally and in her back, her hearing was affected and her wrist was weakened and deformed. She says neither a ladder nor a long handled broom were provided, but that afterwards when plaintiff returned to work she was furnished with a “nice long brush” and “a dandy good stepladder.” Neither of these, according to her evidence, were furnished before she was hurt.

There was flour on the inner or upper side of the door, and after her fall the mark therein across the door showed where her foot had slipped. The door did not bend or sag in any way, nor was it broken. Plaintiff had on cloth-topped button shoes with ordinary low heels and was wearing overalls. The inner side of the door whereon plaintiff stood was “-slick,” but plaintiff had not examined it nor paid any attention to it before she fell. However, she admitted that she had opened these doors a number of times before, that when she was waiting to help the millers with their work it was a part of her duties to opten these doors and that she knew what the inside surface of them was like. As this was a flouring* mill and she was employed to sweep and dust, no doubt “dust and flour” got upon everything and the *561 foreman so testified. Doubtless, however, it would not accumulate on things out in the room like it would on the inside of the machines since the rooms were swept and dusted. Defendant’s evidence-shows it was necessary to dust and clean the room, and that in the work of the machine the flour passed over the surface of the door.

There was a ladder in this room on the fourth floor, about four feet high, with a top about 18 inches long and 12 inches wide, not a stepladder, but it sat solid and square on the floor and was a “very substantial looking” ladder, according to the description given of it by defendant’s witnesses.

But plaintiff testified that this ladder was never used to stand upon but was kept at the miller’s desk where the books were, and was used there to sit upon; she had never seen it used for any purpose. Consequently, when the foreman told her to get a ladder she never thought of that one, although no one was sitting on it at the time, there being no one in the room at the time. She went to the third floor in search of one. One of defendant’s witnesses, Mrs. Stroud, says this ladder was kept at the miller’s desk, where the miller sat and made out their records, and that was where she always saw it Another witness of defendant, Morris, who had worked at the mill two and a half years, who knew plaintiff and was employed there at the time she was hurt but not on that shift at the time, said he recognized the ladder in evidence ánd that it was kept on the fourth floor. He was then asked—

“ Q. For what is it used? A. Well, it is used for a ladder; that is what it was made for. Of course, we sit on it there — when we are not using it.

“Q. Is it used by anyone besides the millers? A. Well, they do not usually take it away, from that floor.

“The Court: Q. State what they use that for on that floor. A. Well, to get up on, anything you would want to.

*562 “Q. Just name some of the purposes for which it is used. For what purposes do they get up on it? A. Well, you could use it to get up to brush off machinery and spouts, or anything.

“Q. And was it used for that purpose? A. Well, I couldn’t say about that. That is what it was there for, though. ’ ’

The foreman, also defendant’s witness, said this ladder was “used for any purpose where we used a ladder; no special purpose;” that it was used to get up to a spout on top of a machine but he didn’t know that plaintiff ever used it. Later he said that plaintiff in cleaning the spouts would “usually get a ladder and broom;” that it was “sometimes this ladder and sometimes another ladder,” a step ladder, probably a little taller than the other one, and that it was “usually kept on the third or fourth floor.” Pie admitted that “we used it to sit on” and that the men did sit on it.

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 658, 209 Mo. App. 557, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craven-v-midland-milling-co-moctapp-1922.