Doyle v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Trust Co.

41 S.W. 255, 140 Mo. 1, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 41 S.W. 255 (Doyle v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Trust 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
Doyle v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Trust Co., 41 S.W. 255, 140 Mo. 1, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 207 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Burgess, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff, the result of a fall received by him while in the service of defendant as a laborer, in consequence of the alleged defective construction of a scaffold or runway over which he had to pass when in and about his work. He recovered a verdict for $5,000, for which sum judgment was rendered. Defendant appeals.

The petition charges negligence on the part of defendant in failing to properly nail or secure the planks or the boards of the runway; in having planks or boards thereon which were too short and too narrow for the purpose; that one of the planks projected beyond the opposite edges or tops of the sides of one of the bins and failed to reach the edges of the adjoining bins; and in beginning at the top instead of at the bottom to cut out the scaffolding. The answer was a general denial.

On June 21, 1892, the defendant, a corporation organized under the laws of this State, was engaged in the construction of a grain elevator, called “The Sun Elevator,” in Kansas City, Missouri. The building was divided by bin walls into four rows of bins from north to south, and fourteen from east to west. When the carpenters had built the bin walls to a height where they could no longer work to advantage without changing their positions, timbers would be laid across the tops of the bin walls from one to two feet apart and loose boards laid over at right angles and of such dimensions that the entire bin would be covered. The workmen, on completing the new scaffold, would build up the wall just as they had done before, until it got so high that they could not reach above it, when they [9]*9would lay another set of, timbers across the bin and ascend to the next stage, each time taking the flooring with them, but leaving the supports in, because they had become part of the wall.

It was the practice at this elevator to clear out these bins by removing the last staging and having a workman begin at the top and cut out the transverse timbers with a saw, thus removing the timbers as he went down. As the timbers were sawed, the laborers on top would pull up the pieces and deliver them to other laborers who carried them to the south side of the building from whence they were lowered by means of a rope to the ground.

The workmen who carried the lumber from the point at which they were drawn up to the south side of the building, preparatory to its being lowered to the ground, used a runway located about the middle of the building. This runway was built by laying side by side two planks sixteen feet long, ten inches wide, and two inches thick, over the tops of the walls and “lapping” them over the last support with the next pair, and so on. At different places a third plank would be laid so as to afford an opportunity for the workmen to pass each other. ’ At the time of the accident neither roof nor rafters had been erected. At that time plaintiff had been employed at the building some two months, but always worked on the ground and had never been on top. On the morning of that day at about 7:30 or 8 o’clock John Devore, a workman in charge of the laborers, came to him and ordered him to report for work on top of the building. He hesitated because it was unsafe and he was likely to get dizzy, and being hard of heai’ing, refused to go, whereupon Devore commanded him to go where he told him, or “get his time,” meaning that he would discharge plaintiff, but in obedience to this order he went [10]*10immediately to work upon the top of the building where ordered by Devore. When he got there he was put to work carrying the short lumber which had been cut out of the bins, to the south side of the building where they were lowered to the ground, and on his way back he met another workman who was carrying an armful of lumber to the same place. Upon meeting him, plaintiff stepped aside on a switch to let him pass, and not knowing that it was not nailed or fastened down, he stepped upon a projecting end which tilted from his weight and let him fail a distance of forty-five feet to the bottom of the building, breaking one of his hips, and injuring his back, spine and hearing.

At the close of the evidence on the part of the plaintiff, and again at the close of all the evidence, defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, both of which were refused, and defendant duly excepted. The court at the request of the plaintiff, and over the objection and exception of defendant, instructed the jury as follows:

“1. It was the duty of the defendant to exercise ordinary and reasonable care to provide a reasonably safe place for the plaintiff to do the work which he was engaged to perform. And if you find that plaintiff was employed by the defendant and directed to go on top of the elevator in question and do the work he was engaged in at the time of his injury, then it was the duty of the defendant to have exercised ordinary and reasonable care proportionate to the danger in providing for him a reasonably safe staging or platform on which to do the work; and if you find that it failed in this by omitting to have the boards or planks composing the staging or runway nailed or otherwise properly secured, and that in consequence thereof plaintiff without fault on his part and in the exercise of ordinary [11]*11care was injured, then he is entitled to recover in this action; and you will so find.
“2. It was the duty of the defendant to use ordinary care to furnish for the use of plaintiff and his fellow workmen a scaffolding that was reasonbly safe for the purpose for which it was intended and used, and if you find that the defendant negligently failed to perform this duty and furnished a scaffolding that was unsafe; that defendant’s foreman in charge of the men and the work knew of the unsafe condition of said scaffolding, and that with such knowledge upon the part of the said foreman, the said foreman further negligently failed to either remedy the defect or warn the plaintiff of the danger of going upon said scaffolding and that the plaintiff while in the exercise of ordinary care and without negligence upon his part and without knowledge of the unsafe condition of the scaffolding went upon said scaffolding in the performance of the duty assigned him and by reason of the defect therein was thrown to the ground and injured, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover.
“3. An employee or servant has the right to assume in the absence of knowledge to the contrary that the appliances which he is called upon to use in the performance of his work are reasonably safe, and if there are latent defects of which he has no knowledge, or which are not obvious to him while using ordinary care and observation, then he does not assume the risk attendant thereon.
“4. If you find that the staging or runway on •which plaintiff was injured was constructed before he was sent up there to work, then it is immaterial as to who or which one of defendant’s employees constructed it, as it would then be the duty of the defendant in such case to have exercised reasonable care to have [12]*12prepared there a staging or runway that was reasonably safe for plaintiff to work upon.
“5.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W. 255, 140 Mo. 1, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-missouri-kansas-texas-trust-co-mo-1897.