Holloran v. Union Iron & Foundry Co.

35 S.W. 260, 133 Mo. 470, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 260 (Holloran v. Union Iron & Foundry 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
Holloran v. Union Iron & Foundry Co., 35 S.W. 260, 133 Mo. 470, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 146 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

This is an action for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, in falling from the first floor of the DeMenil building in St. Louis into the cellar thereof during its construction.

Plaintiff was a laborer for the Union Iron & Foundry Company which had the contract for the iron work in said building and had been employed for two years by said company in the general work of receiving, moving, and putting up iron work in buildings in [474]*474the course of construction. On the day he received his injuries, plaintiff was engaged, in conjunction with several other laborers, in moving an upright derrick ón loose planks laid for that purpose across the uncovered iron girders of the first floor of said DeMenil building. The first story had no floor as yet, the iron columns and cross beams only having been put in place and fastened. The derrick was provided with small wheels or rollers.

On this occasion a run or track was laid consisting of planks laid side by side and extended end to end across the girders, on which the derrick was to be moved. The derrick was pushed along on these planks by plaintiff, and was pulled and guided by Droney, the foreman of the gang, on the front, or the end in the direction they were moving it. This work had proceeded safely up to a certain point when it was observed by the foreman, who was engaged with the other men in this work, that the derrick was running to one side, and he thereupon called to plaintiff, who was standing on a plank immediately behind the derrick, prying it from behind by means of a crowbar, to “cut it in.” This he attempted to do by stepping to one side, allowing one foot to rest on the plank on which he had been standing, and bracing the other against one of the iron girders running alongside the plank, and inserting his crowbar under the derrick from the side. Whilst in this position his foot, braced against the girder, slipped, and he fell into the cellar below, receiving the injuries complained of.

Testimony was introduced to the effect that plaintiff- and the other men engaged with him had complained sometime before this to the foreman that they were not provided with enough planks for this work. No two agree as to just what was said to, or by, the foreman. The only witnesses introduced (aside from [475]*475the physician) were plaintiff, Lehman, a fellow laborer, and Droney, the foreman of the - gang. As to these complaints the testimony of these witnesses is as follows, viz.:

Plaintiff testified: “Before moving the derrick in the morning I told Droney I couldn’t do with these four planks; he said, go ahead, he would get more right away; told him I would sooner quit than work on such a job; he said he would get more right away, and to go on.”

Lehman testified: “Holloran said to Droney, ‘We ought to have more planks there; ’ heard Droney say, ‘We can’t get any more, we have to get along with them;’ heard no conversation next morning; I also objected; that is all I heard objected. Droney said: We have got all he could get and must get along with them. Said nothing about getting more; sent me out .to get in some columns. Came back; told him it was getting dangerous here. I says: ‘We ain’t got no more planks loose now.’ He says: ‘Well, I can’t hel$r it, we have got to try to get along with it.”’ On cross-examination he says that he “meant that I needed more plank to roll in columns.”

Droney, the foreman, testified: “Don’t know whether Holloran said anything in particular about there not being sufficient planks; the whole gang of them said we ought to have more; I told them we would try to get some more, but we would try to get along with that, for it was all we had; didn’t try to get more that day.” On cross-examination he says: “Holloran was present. I said, you take your party and roll in some of those columns; I was working at stake with another man at the end; they came over and said, we haven’t got enough of plank; I said, we will get along to-day; they, the whole crowd, said they ought to have moie plank to run in the columns on. [476]*476They were not moving derrick at that time; that was about an hour after. The planks asked for toere for rolling in columns and the eight hoards were intended for derrick

As to the relation of the witness Droney to the plaintiff and the other men engaged with him in the work at hand, the testimony introduced shows simply that he acted for the defendant as a foreman in directing these men what to do and when to do it. He engaged in the work with them. It nowhere appears that he had any power tó provide materials or appliances of any kind, or any right to employ or discharge men.

Upon the foregoing facts the circuit court sustained a demurrer to the evidence and plaintiff appeals. The question for determination upon this record is whether upon the evidence as it stood the circuit court correctly ruled that the case should be withdrawn from the jury by a peremptory instruction that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

The general rule is well settled, and is evidenced by many decisions, not only of this court but of the courts of last resort in England and of the various states of the Union, that if one who is fully capable of selecting and contracting for himself voluntarily enters into an employment with full notice of the risks thereof, he is held to assume the risks of injury ordinarily incident to such employment.

This general rule does not obtain where the risk is known to the master or by the exercise of ordinary care should be known to him and is not known by the servant, and it has been often ruled in this state that this general rule is not applicable if the servant incurs the risk of machinery which, though dangerous, is not so much so as to threaten immediate injury, or when it is reasonable to suppose that it may be safely used [477]*477with great care or skill. Mere knowledge on his part will not defeat his recovery, if injured under the circumstances last mentioned. Conroy v. Vulcan Iron Works, 62 Mo. 35; Huhn v. Railroad, 92 Mo. 440; Hamilton v. Rick Hill Mining Co., 108 Mo. 364; O’Mellia v. Railroad, 115 Mo. 205.

Is the present case one for the application of the general rule? Did the plaintiff knowingly assume the risk of falling into the cellar?

According to all the evidence he had been employed in adjusting iron work in the construction of buildings for two years. He was well acquainted with the duties required of him and the modus operandi. It is not claimed that it was foreign to his employment to require him to assist in rolling the derrick from one portion of the unfinished building to another, nor that it was unusual to move it upon planks laid as on the occasion when he fell. He was a man of mature years, he was not a minor or a raw and inexperienced man employed in a work which was strange to him. He knew and fully appreciated the usual risks of his employment, and with this knowledge, and with the risks open and obvious to him and, for that matter, to every one working about the building, at that period in its construction, he undertook to assist in moving the derrick. He knew the floor had not yet been laid and the only way of moving the derrick or columns was by the temporary use of the loose planks provided for that purpose. The danger was that he might fall between the uncovered iron girders or rafters. It was perfectly apparent that a careless step would precipitate him into the cellar below.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 260, 133 Mo. 470, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloran-v-union-iron-foundry-co-mo-1896.