Diehl Ex Rel. Diehl v. A. P. Green Fire Brick Co.

253 S.W. 984, 299 Mo. 641, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 984 (Diehl Ex Rel. Diehl v. A. P. Green Fire Brick Co.) 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
Diehl Ex Rel. Diehl v. A. P. Green Fire Brick Co., 253 S.W. 984, 299 Mo. 641, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 232 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*648 DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

The action was for damages for personal injuries. Jury trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $10,000, and defendant has appealed from the judgment rendered thereon.'

The petition alleged that on and prior to May 28, 1920, the defendant was engaged in the business of sinking a shaft and mining clay at said shaft and that, in sinking and mining said shaft, defendant used dynamite and caps; that plaintiff and his brother had been in the habit of carrying to said shaft the meals for their father, who worked at said shaft, which custom was well known to defendant, its agents and servants, and that defendant and its servants knew or could have known that, in bringing such meals to their father, plaintiff and his brother traveled along and across the right-of-way of the Chicago & Alton Railway Company adjacent to the shaft; that on the aforesaid day, or a day. or two previous thereto, defendant or its agents, servants and employees carelessly and negligently threw dynamite caps, a high and dangerous explosive, along such right-of-way and at a point upon said right-of-way where the defendant, its agents and servants or employees knew or could have known that the plaintiff and his brother were likely to pass and likely to see or be attracted to said dynamite caps; that on said 28th day of May, 1920, plaintiff and his brother took their father’s breakfast to him at the shaft of defendant and, in returning home by their usual and customary route across the right-of-way of said railroad, were attracted by and picked up said dynamite caps, and that plaintiff and his brother carried said dynamite caps home and thereafter, while playing with the same, one of the dynamite caps exploded and plaintiff was seriously injured thereby. Said petition then set out in detail the injuries alleged to have been received by plaintiff, which said injuries he alleges to have been very serious and of a permanent character and prayed judgment in the sum of $30,000.

The answer of defendant denied that it was engaged in sinking a shaft as alleged in the petition or that it used *649 dynamite or caps thereat through its agents, servants or employees. Such answer further alleged in substance that the clay mining operations at said shaft were being carried on by one J ames W. Reid under a lease taken in the name of the defendant; that said Reid was an independent contractor, responsible only for results and over whom the defendant had no power of direction or control. Said answer set out the contract for the payment to be made by the defendant to said Reid. The answer further alleges that the injuries which plaintiff sustained were caused by his own negligence and the negligence of his father and mother; that plaintiff took a percussion cap voluntarily, and roughly handled the same and applied fire and heat thereto in the presence of his father and mother and with their knowledge and consent, and that plaintiff’s mother had said cap in her possession and examined and tested the same, probing into it and after ascertaining its condition and contents, delivered the- cap to the plaintiff, and that the act of plaintiff’s mother in delivering said cap to plaintiff thereafter constituted an independent, direct and proximate cause of whatever injury plaintiff received by reason of said cap exploding. The reply was a general denial.

At the time of his injury, May 28,1920, plaintiff was seven year old, and prosecuted the action by his father as next friend. The undisputed facts are that one J. W. Reed (or Reid) and two shifts of men working under his direction were engaged in sinking and enlarging an old mine shaft near Fulton,' Missouri, for the purpose of mining fire clay therefrom, to be used by defendant in its manufacturing business at its plant at Mexico, Missouri. Plaintiff’s father, Henry Diehl, was employed on the morning shift at said shaft. The family consisted of Henry Diehl and his wife and at least two sons, August, the plaintiff, and Freddie, ten or eleven years of age. The Diehl family lived near the mine. Henry Diehl went to work very early in the morning, and for at le'ast two or three mornings before the date of the injury the plaintiff and Freddie took his breakfast to him at about seven *650 o’clock a. m. In some manner and somewhere the boys came into possession of four unexploded caps nsed to set off the charges of dynamite. Dynamite, fuse and caps were used in the shaft where Henry Diehl worked and a supply of the same was kept in the office or shed at the shaft. Two or three days prior to plaintiff’s injury one of the men employed on, the afternoon shift had removed four dynamite caps and fuses to which they were crimped, and one Ernest Custard had twisted the fuses together and had thrown them, together with the caps attached to them, to a point across the tracks of the Chicago & Alton Railroad into some grass and weeds. The Diehl home was west of the railroad tracks, and the clay mining* shaft on the east side. In bringing their father’s breakfast the 'boys passed within at least fifty feet of the spot where the dynamite caps had been thrown.

After securing possession of the dynamite caps above mentioned (they testified fuses were attached to the caps when they found them and that they threw away the fuses), the boys took them home and showed them to their mother. She probed into one of them with a stick and handed it back to Freddie, the older brother. He after-wards gave one of the caps to August,- and he picked up a small stick from the fire where his mother had been doing her washing and inserted such stick into the cap. The stick had fire on that end and this doubtless caused the cap to explode. Plaintiff’s left hand was so injured that amputation of all or a part of two fingers and the thumb resulted. His right eye was completely destroyed, so that the eyeball was afterwards removed, and his left eye was injured to such an extent that he was slowly losing his vision in that eye at 'the time of the trial. The seriousness of the injury is not controverted, and no contention is made that the verdict is excessive.

In addition to the undisputed facts, the evidence of plaintiff tends to show that Freddie Diehl found the four dynamite caps and fuses at the point on the railroad right-of-way where Ernest Custard threw away four caps *651 and attached fuses; that at least the plaintiff did not know what they were. Henry Diehl was asked if he had not stated that the hoys secured the dynamite caps at an old coal mine dump, and upon his denial of this statement witnesses were produced to show that he had made such statement.

It also appears that, a few days after the accident and after it became noised about that suit was to be filed against defendant to recover damages for the injury received by the Diehl boy, seven or eight men employed at the fire clay shaft engaged in a search of the railroad right-of-way where Ernest Custard had thrown the fuses and unexploded caps, and after some effort, one of the men (not Custard) found four unexploded caps attached to fuses twisted together. Custard’s testimony tended to show that they were the identical caps and fuses he had thrown away. These caps and fuses were produced at the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 984, 299 Mo. 641, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diehl-ex-rel-diehl-v-a-p-green-fire-brick-co-mo-1923.