Irmer v. St. Louis Brewing Co.

69 Mo. App. 17, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 3
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 69 Mo. App. 17 (Irmer v. St. Louis Brewing 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
Irmer v. St. Louis Brewing Co., 69 Mo. App. 17, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 3 (Mo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

Pleadings.

This is an action by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover damages for personal injuries received by the former in consequence of the negligence of the latter. The specific acts of negligence alleged in the plaintiff’s petition are the following, to wik First. That defendant negligently . . . , , and carelessly maintained a dangerous trapdoor and cellarway immediately in front of its office where plaintiff was by his duties compelled to go, said trapdoor and cellarway forming a part of the floor over which he was compelled to pass, and said trapdoor and cellarway being so near the entrance to said [21]*21office that a person coming out of the same would be likely to fall into said cellarway when said trapdoor was raised before he would have opportunity to see that the same was open. Second. That defendant negligently and carelessly raised said trapdoor, and negligently and carelessly left said cellarway opened and unguarded and unlighted. Third. That defendant carelessly and negligently failed to provide and keep lighted a light at or near said trapdoor and cellarway so that one passing over or near the same could see that it was open and dangerous.

The answer was a general denial accompanied with the plea of contributory negligence and that the plaintiff’s injuries were occasioned by the negligence of a fellow servant.

There was a trial which resulted in judgment for plaintiff and from the latter defendant appealed. The appealing defendant assails the judgment mainly on the ground that the trial court erred in its action refusing the peremptory instruction asked by it.

There was evidence adduced at the trial which tended to establish substantially these facts.

Fact. That defendant for some months prior to the happening of the injury complained of, maintained a depot in Kansas City for the storing and delivery of beer in said city; that plaintiff was employed by it as the driver of one of its beer wagons; that its office was in the northwest corner of its depot building and the room of its drivers was in the southwest corner; that between the two was a wide entrance way through which its wagons were accustomed to drive into a large quadrangular room where they were loaded; that at the rear, or east end of this room, was the cooling rooms, in which the beer was stored. Running from the back door of the office along the north and east sides of this large room, was an elevated platform [22]*22about three and one half feet high, and about five feet wide, used as a loading platform-, and also as a walk or passageway. There were steps leading up onto this platform, and the ordinary way of passage from the foreman’s office to that of the superintendent was across the wagon room, up these steps, and along the platform to the back door of the office. There were four or five large posts situated at the edge of this platform, and supporting the upper story of the building, and on each of these posts was a gas jet. One of these posts set about two feet east of the back door of the office, .to which the south office partition ran, forming a sort of vestibule for this entrance. In the center of the platform, or passageway, about four feet from the office door, and two feet from this vestibule, was a trapdoor opening on a stairway leading to the cellar. This door was two feet, eight inches wide, and sis feet, six inches long. When raised, the door rested against the north wall of the room, so that it left open about half of the passageway. The cellar to which the trapdoor led had been arranged for bottling beer, but had not been used except for the storing of coal.

Plaintiff, on January 6, 1894, after making his last round of the customers, returned to the depot about half past 5 o’clock, but he first went to the foreman’s office where he made up his accounts and checked them over with the foreman; then he went through the wagon room (the usual way) up the steps onto the platform and along the same to the office, where he made his report to the bookkeeper. He desired to see the superintendent (Mr. Meier) about a beer bung that one of the customers asked for, but as he was not in at that time, he returned to the foreman’s office to wait until he should come in. About 6 o’clock, learning that Mr. Meier had come to the office, he again went there by the same route, and informed him of the customer’s [23]*23request. Mr. Meier, after looking, told him he had none, whereupon plaintiff said there was one in the foreman’s office that would do if repaired, and Meier told him to get it and bring it to him and he would have it repaired. Plaintiff returned to the foreman’s office, got the beer bung, and came back • the usual route. When he reached the back door of the superintendent’s office Meier was at the telephone. Plaintiff waited to speak to Meier, and while waiting was standing on the trapdoor and another driver came up behind him and also waited to enter the office and . make his report.

When Meier finished using the telephone he went back into the office, plaintiff and the other driver following him in. Plaintiff gave Meier the beer bung, and showed him what had to be fixed and, turning around, opened the door with one hand and the screen door with the other, closing the office door as ho stepped out, and stepped right into the open stairway, and fell, breaking both bones of the left leg in the ankle joint.

He had been in the office but a minute or two, talking with Meier, and while he was there the stable man, Freitag, had gone into the cellar after coal and left the trapdoor open. In this large quadrangular room there was no gas jet lighted, although there were numerous gas jets there, and the only light in the room was such as came from the one jet in the office through the glass panel of the office door. This was a double-armed jet fixed in the south wall of the office, about ten feet from' the door, and about five and one half feet above the office floor. When extended, it would stand out about fourteen or fifteen inches, and when pushed back would stand close to the wall. Whether it was extended on this night, or pushed back against the wall, the evidence does not [24]*24show. The bookkeeper, a man about six feet tall, was writing at a standing desk in front of the jet, a safe about four feet high stood back of the door, and Meier was leaning up against the safe, and Wenthe, the other driver, was standing there near him, all three of them between the gas jet and the glass panel of the door. Plaintiff testified that he could not see that the trapdoor was raised. That the shadows of the wooden panel extended across the trapdoor, and on coming out of the lighted room one was not able to see whether the trapdoor was open or closed.

Master and Servant: place or working: negligence: evidence. If the defendant was guilty of the negligence alleged against it, the plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury unless he disentitled himself thereto by his own contributory negligence. The evidence discloses that the legal relation existing between plaintiff and defendant at the time of the former’s injury was that of master and servant. The law enjoins upon the master the duty to furnish the- servant a place where the work is to be carried on that is reasonably safe. By reference to the adjudications cited by us in Musick v. Dold, 58 Mo. App. 323, it will be seen that this rule of the common law is very firmly imbedded in our jurisprudence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 Mo. App. 17, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irmer-v-st-louis-brewing-co-moctapp-1897.