Dunscomb ex rel. Dunscomb v. Lusk

190 S.W. 397, 195 Mo. App. 344, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 48
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 397 (Dunscomb ex rel. Dunscomb v. Lusk) 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
Dunscomb ex rel. Dunscomb v. Lusk, 190 S.W. 397, 195 Mo. App. 344, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 48 (Mo. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

STURGIS, J.

Suit for personal injuries to a boy eleven years- of age, occasioned by bis falling under tbe wheels of a stock car while same was being moved by hand in connection with loading some stock belonging to plaintiff’s father at the station of Clarkton, in Dunklin County. Plaintiff had assisted his father in bringing the hogs to town and on arriving there they found another car loaded with stock standing at the chute of the stock pen. Two other cars were standing east of this one on the side track, one of which plaintiff’s- father was to use in loading his stock. The local freight train had placed, or “spotted,” the. one car at the stock chute, and then went on to Malden, whence it would return to Clarkton in about an hour. Malden was not on the main line and [346]*346the train went to that town on a branch line and then back to Clarkton and the evidence shows that when more than one car had to be placed at the cattle chute at Clarkton the train crew usually spotted one and then went on to Malden. When plaintiff’s father found that the train had just gone and he would have to wait an hour or more in order to have the loaded car moved and his car placed in position to be loaded, the station agent suggested that they move these cars by hand so as to save time both in loading the stock and in getting the car out. To this plaintiff’s father readily assented, and he, with his two boys, one being plaintiff, and his hired man, together with defendant’s station agent, Elkins, proceeded to move these cars. They moved the loaded car away from the chute westward without any mishap, but in moving the first empty car in the same direction the plaintiff, while on the north side of the same near the front end, slipped and fell under the wheels, resulting in his arm being crushed and broken. For this injury the jury awarded him $1000 in damages.

The allegations of negligence in the petition and in plaintiff’s instruction authorizing a finding for plaintiff are as follows: “The negligence of the agent or agents of the defendants in requesting or directing plaintiff to assist in moving a box car, (2) and in requesting or permitting plaintiff to go upon the north side of said box car out of the view of the station agent of defendants and the other there assisting in moving said box car for the purpose of assisting in moving said car, when the defendant knew the youth and inexperience of plaintiff, (3) the negligence and carelessness of the defendants in directing or permitting plaintiff to assist in moving a box car over and along a track, the ties of which extended above the ground, (4) and the failure of the defendants to spot or place the Dunscomb car with the engine before making trip to Malden.”

I.

We will note more at length the facts in evidence in connection with each ground of negligence specified, [347]*347though not following the same order as the pleader. First, as to the negligence of defendant’s agent in directing or requesting plaintiff to assist in moving the .box cars. The plaintiff was with his father and hired man for the purpose of helping to drive and load these hogs just as any eleven year old farm boy would do. There is little difference in the evidence as to what the agent did and said when plaintiff’s father came to the depot and learned that the train had just gone and that these, cars would have to be moved before the hogs could be loaded. Plaintiff’s father testified that he was about to go up town when the agent said: “Could we spot that car and load that stuff?” Plaintiff’s father at once assented and they all proceeded to move the cars by hand. It was shown to be a common thing for stock-men to move or assist in moving cars in this way and plaintiff’s father had so helped at other times.' It was near eleven o’clock and the reason for not wanting to wait until the train returned was to save time and get the hogs loaded before dinner and ready to go out as soon as the train returned. While plaintiff’s father was under no obligation to move or help move the ear in place to be loaded, it was an advantage to him and he readily agreed. Nothing was said to plaintiff and what he did was to merely follow along with his father ready to help as best he could. Certainly without more it was not negligence of the agent to permit this boy to accompany his father and to render such assistance as such a boy might under the immediate eye and care of hip father. To so hold is to convict the father of even greater wrong.

II.

The loaded cár being hard to move, defendant’s agent procured two crow bars commonly used to pull spikes and these were used as pinch bars under the hind wheels to move the car along. One was used by the hired man and plaintiff’s father and the agent took turns in using the other. It appears that in doing this the pinch bars would slip on the rails and this boy, [348]*348plaintiff, commenced helping by placing a stick of wood at the heel of the pinch bars, or “scotching” as it was called. Some stress is laid on the fact that the agent, Elkins, picked np a block of wood and gave it to the boy to nse for this purpose, telling him to be careful not to mash his fingers. This agent says that when he did this the boy was already using a stick for this purpose which had become somewhat mashed, and he merely gave him and told him to use the other. We find no contradiction of this. The boy was helping both his father and the agent in this way.

The plaintiff insists that this boy sustained the relation to the father of helper and that defendant owed him the same duty as it did the father and his hired man — that of a licensee with interest, which we will note later. Since the boy owed the father the duty of service and obedience, both law and morals imposed. on the father the duty to care for his son’s safety. Why, then, should defendant’s agent be called upon to stop the boy from doing work which the facts show met the approval of his father ? Moreover the plaintiff was not injured in this - particular work or in any way, connected with it. Its only force is that it gave the agent knowledge that the boy was assisting in the work generally and bears on the question of its being negligence per se in the agent to permit the boy to. do so. We rule this point against plaintiff.

III.

We also rule that there is no negligence in defendant’s failure to have the train crew spot or place the Dunscomb car at the stock chute before proceeding to Malden. Another car was placed there, though the evidence does not show when it was loaded with reference to the train’s departure. It is not shown that plaintiff’s father’s hogs were to arrive or be loaded at any particular hour and when the train crew were ready to depart, these hogs had not yet arrived and the agent and train crew could not know just when they would arrive. The train would be back in an hour and plaintiff’s [349]*349father could have declined to assist in moving the cars hy hand and it would then have been up to the railroad to do this for him. There was no negligence in this respect and, if there was, it was so remote that it would he difficult to hold that such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury.

IV.

Another .ground of negligence is that defendant’s agent directed or permitted plaintiff to assist in moving cars along a track where the ends of the ties extended above the ground..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 397, 195 Mo. App. 344, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunscomb-ex-rel-dunscomb-v-lusk-moctapp-1917.