Goucan v. Atlas Portland Cement Co.

298 S.W. 789, 317 Mo. 919, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 480
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 789 (Goucan v. Atlas Portland Cement 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
Goucan v. Atlas Portland Cement Co., 298 S.W. 789, 317 Mo. 919, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 480 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*923 ATWOOD, J.

This is an action for $10,000 damages by Mary Gouean (formerly Mjary Moga), widow of John Moga, deceased, against Atlas Portland Cement Company and L. J. Boucher, the superintendent in charge of its rock quarry, for the death of her husband occasioned by an explosion of dynamite while he was working for said company as a blaster in said quarry. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the trial court sustained defendants’ demurrer thereto, and plaintiff suffered an involuntary nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside. Plaintiff’s motion thereafter made to set aside the nonsuit was denied and plaintiff has appealed from the court’s ruling thereon.

Plaintiff’s evidence was adduced on her amended petition, which charged that it was the duty of defendants to furnish her said husband with a reasonably safe place in which and with reasonably safe appliances with which to perform his duties, and to exercise ordinary care to keep said place and appliances reasonably safe for the performance of his duties, and to discover and remove anything from the quarry which would render his place of work not reasonably safe; that it was the duty of defendants to direct and control the manner in which the said Moga performed his work, that it was his duty to obey, and that he at all times relied and acted upon their superior knowledge, authority and assurances; that defendants failed to discharge their said duties to’ the said Moga; that while in the usual and ordinary manner under the orders, direction and supervision of defendants he was placing dynamite in a hole, known as hole number 2, drilled in a rock ledge of said quarry for that purpose, defendants carelessly, negligently and wrongfully directed and permitted the operation, in another drill hole in the same ledge and within twelve feet of the hole which the said Moga was then and there loading with dynamite, of a heavy mechanical contrivance known as a Star well drill which lifted and let fall with great force and violence about sixty-two times a minute a large steel stem weighing about 1200 pounds, jarring and cracking said rock ledge and caus *924 ing stones to shake loose from the sides of the hole where the said Moga was at work and upon the dynamite therein; that the said Moga then and there, protested against such operation of said drill, and protested against placing more dynamite in said hole while said drill was being- so operated, but was directed and commanded by -defendants’ foreman having- control and direction over him to put an additional half box of dynamite in said hole, and was told by said foreman that the work must be thus proceeded with, that they would not stop the drill, and that it would be safe for him so ti> proceed, and in obedience to said orders and directions and relying upon said assurances the said Moga so proceeded at all times in the exercise of due care on his part; that in connection with said work defendants supplied and furnished a wooden pole or tamping stick about two inches in diameter and about sixteen feet long which was customarily used in this kind of work by letting it down into the drill hole for the purpose of dislodging dynamite when the same became lodged in the hole before it reached the bottom; that under the direction and command of said foreman and while said drill was being* negligently, Avrongfully and carelessly operated by defendants as aforesaid, the said Moga placed said wooden tamping stick in said drill hole to dislodge some dynamite that became lodged therein about twelve feet from the top; that while he was thus engaged defendants negligently, wrongfully and carelessly continued the operation of said drill as aforesaid in such close proximity to the drill hole where the said Moga was at work that it “caused rock io fall into said hole from the sides thereof and onto other rocks in immediate proximity to the dynamite in said hole, which rocks so falling against each other and against said dynamite caused sparks or percussion which said sparks or percussion or both caused said dynamite to explode, which explosion killed said John Moga, or that said (trill so negligently, Avrongfully and carelessly operated as aforesaid in such close proximity to said bole number 2 caused such violent A’ibration and jar upon and about said hole as to cause sparks or percussion or jarring in said hole in and about said dynamite and said dynamite was caused thereby to be exploded; that in said violent explosion ensuing, said John Moga ivas instantly killed; that plaintiff does not know which of the .alternative statements is true, but is informed and believes and alleges upon such, information and belief, that one or the other of said alternative statements is trae.”

Defendants’ amended ansAver Avas a general denial, coupled with charges of contributory negligence and assumption of risk. Plaintiff’s reply was a general denial of the matters set up in defendants’ answer.

From plaintiff’s evidence it appears that at tlie time of his death John Moga Avas thirty-eight years of age, the husband of appellant *925 and tlie father of four children; that he was born in .Rumania, but had been a naturalized American citizen for many years, and for nearly twenty years had worked for respondent Atlas' Portland Cement Company in its quarries and was an experienced blaster. In some of the testimony Moga was referred to as a sub-foreman of the blasters, but it appears that he oidy served as such in the absence of the general foreman, Pete Limbean, who was present on the morning the explosion occurred and was in the active and sole charge of the blasters, including the said Moga, and the hammer-drillers, but did not have control of the Star well drill, the operation of which is alleged to have caused the explosion. It further appeared that it was defendant company’s previous unbroken custom to have tire necessary number of holes drilled and the machine moved out of the way and then have the holes loaded with dynamite under the instruction of a foreman; that “usually a drill is 300 or 400 feet away from the hole that is being loaded;” that it was the custom never to “start loading a hole until the Star well drill is moved away.”

On the morning the explosion occurred Moga and the other blasters commenced loading holes at seven o’clock. A row of holes had previously been drilled about twelve feet from the outer edge of the ledge of rock, and a second row had been partially drilled about twelve feet back of and zigzag with the first row. Pete Limbean, under whose immediate direction and control Moga was working, testified:

“The S'tar well driller was about 150 feet inside, ready to go to work; the night crew had gone home and the day crew had come on at seven o’clock. That morning the Star well crew came on at seven, but did not start to drill until quarter of eight, because they had a bad hole, got their bit stuck in it and could not finish it because it was a bad hole; they were working on this hole when we started to load; the drill crew consisted of Mike Bayjohn and Eli Hickerson.”

When the blasters began their work each took a hole to load. At hole number one, which was the first one in the first line of holes, was a blaster named Lupu.

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 789, 317 Mo. 919, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goucan-v-atlas-portland-cement-co-mo-1927.