Eaton & Prince Co. v. Mississippi Valley Trust Co.

100 S.W. 551, 123 Mo. App. 117, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 569
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 100 S.W. 551 (Eaton & Prince Co. v. Mississippi Valley Trust 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
Eaton & Prince Co. v. Mississippi Valley Trust Co., 100 S.W. 551, 123 Mo. App. 117, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 569 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

(after stating the facts). — The purpose of this action is to enforce contribution from respondent toward reimbursing appellant for the amount of a judgment recovered in an action of tort against both appellant and respondent as codefendants. The action which led to the judgment was brought by Margaretha Appel to obtain damages for the death of her husband. She charged that his death was caused by the negligence of said codefendants. It is stated in the present petition that both appellant and respondent appealed to this court from the judgment against them in favor of Mrs. Appel and that the appeal resulted in an affirmance of the judgment; that after the affirmance, appellant paid the full amount of the judgment with interest and costs and demanded contribution, which was refused. The contents of the petition may be divided into four parts. The first part consists of allegations of the rendition of the judgment in favor of Mrs. Appel in the circuit court, its affirmance in this court, its subsequent discharge by appellant, the demand for contribution and respondent’s refusal to contribute. The second part of the petition consists of certain allegations regarding the proceedings on the appeal of the original action. These allegations are, in substance, that in the decision first given by this court, it was held that respondent, the Mississippi Valley Trust Company, was liable for Appel’s death because of said company’s negligence; but, that appellant had been guilty of no negligence which laid it liable; that thereupon respondent filed a motion for rehearing, contending there was concurring negligence on the part of both respondent and appellant and appellant should be held [126]*126equally liable for tbe death of Appel; that appellant resisted said motion for rehearing, contending that respondent alone was liable; that a rehearing was granted and the appeal was reargued by both parties, each insisting that the other alone was liable for Appel’s death; that afterwards another decision was rendered by this court in which respondent was again held liable and it was ruled that though appellant’s liability was not so clear, it should be held to equal liability with respondent; that, thereupon, respondent filed another motion for a rehearing, in which' it again insisted that appellant alone was liable and there was no evidence showing liability on its (respondent’s) part; which last motion was overruled and the judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis affirmed. The third part of the petition consiste of averments concerning the statement of her cause of action by Mrs. Appel against the parties to the present action, as codefendants in the former one. She is said to have alleged, in substance, that her husband was at work as ¿ carpenter in an elevator shaft of a building in the city of St. Louis; that it had been agreed between said Appel and the Mississippi Valley Trust Company and the Eaton & Prince Company that the elevator in said shaft should not be run while said Appel was working in it; but notwithstanding this agreement both said parties negligently and -carelessly permitted and directed the elevator to be run and operated in said shaft, and negligently and carelessly permitted it to be run up to the seventh floor of said building and strike a platform on which Appel was standing, thereby inflicting injuries on him which resulted in his death. The fourth part of the petition undertakes to state the substance of the evidence on which a verdict was given against both companies at the trial of Mrs. Appel’s case. That evidence is said to have shown tbe trust company was the owner of the building in which Appel was at work and was ex[127]*127ercising a direct supervision and control over the work in which he was engaged when killed; that said company negligently allowed said elevator to be run up said shaft and strike the platform, without warning Appel, notwithstanding the fact that it had promised him and his employer that the elevator should not be run while he was so at work in the shaft; that Appel was injured thereby and died of his injuries; that for said negligence the trust company was adjudged liable to said Margaretha Appel as aforesaid. The present petition states also that the evidence in the Appel case showed the Eaton & Prince Company was one of several independent contractors who had contracted with the Mississippi Valley Trust Company for work on its building; that the Eaton & Prince Company was putting elevators in the building; that a servant of said Eaton & Prince Company, at work in the basement of this building, who knew of the dangerous position of Appel, placed a stranger to the Eaton & Prince Company in an elevator with directions to run it out of said servant’s way; that said servant failed to give the stranger notice of the dangerous position of Appel overhead; that the stranger took the elevator out of the servant’s way and, on stopping at the second floor, undertook to carry the elevator to the seventh floor to accommodate a passenger who wished to ascend, and in doing so brought the elevator into violent contact with the platform on which Appel was at work, throwing him therefrom and injuring him so that he died. From the allegations regarding the evidence in the Appel case it appears that the Mississippi Valley Trust Company was held liable in damages for Appel’s death because, as the owner of the building wherein Appel was working and while in the exercise of direct supervision and control over the work he was doing, it negligently allowed the elevator to be run up the shaft and strike the platform on which he was standing, in disregard of a promise it had given to [128]*128Mm that the elevator should not be run while he was working in that place. It further appears that the Eaton & Prince Company was held liable because of the negligence of its servants in directing a stranger to move the elevator out of said servant’s way, without warning the stranger that Appel was at work overhead and might be injured if the elevator ascended to where he was.

The question for decision is whether proof of the facts alleged in the petition would constitute a prima facie case against respondent for contribution. It is often said in judicial opinions treating the subject according to the common law, that contribution is not allowed among tortfeasors; a statement much too broad and subject to exceptions of wide application. A statute of this State bears directly on the question before us; hence we are concerned with the common law rule and its limitations chiefly as aids in the effort to ascertain the scope and meaning of the statute; which is shown by its terms to have been enacted to alter, and not to declare, the common law on the subject. The enactment reads:

. “Defendants in a judgment founded on an action for the redress of a private wrong shall be subject to contribution, and all other consequences of such judgment, in the same manner and to the same extent as defendants in a judgment in an action founded on contract.” [R. S. 1899, sec. 2870.]

That statute does not speak of the right of contribution when one of several tortfeasors has paid a common liability under compulsion, but without a judgment being given. It speaks only of the right of codefendants in a judgment in an action founded on a tort. Such defendants are put in as favorable a position, in respect of contribution, as is occupied by defendants in judgments on contract obligations. Independently of a statute, both indemnity and contribution are allowed among wrongdoers under proper circumstances. A party forced [129]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 S.W. 551, 123 Mo. App. 117, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eaton-prince-co-v-mississippi-valley-trust-co-moctapp-1906.