Jewell v. Sturges

151 S.W. 966, 245 Mo. 720, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 268
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 26, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 966 (Jewell v. Sturges) 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
Jewell v. Sturges, 151 S.W. 966, 245 Mo. 720, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 268 (Mo. 1912).

Opinions

WOODSON J.,

— Because of a dissent in Division, this cause was transferred to court in Banc; and after a rehearing was had, the latter adopted the divisional opinion of Woodson, J., as the opinion of the court in Banc, in which Valliant, C. J., Kennish and Brown, JJ., concur; and Lamm, Graves and Ferriss, JJ., dissent.

Said opinion is in words and figures as follows:

This case was here on a former appeal and the opinion affirming an order of the circuit court, granting the plaintiff a new trial, is reported in 231 Mo. 176.

The facts of the ‘case were fully stated in detail, by the court, in the opinion before mentioned, and for that reason, they will be but briefly stated here; reference is made to that case for a statement of the facts as they appear by the record in this appeal.

Briefly stated, the defendant was a large manufacturing concern, which manufactured various products made of iron and steel, and among other things it made rods, bolts and nuts. A part of the work necessary to produce those articles was to 'heat and roll large bodies of iron through the rolling mill, which constituted one of the departments of the defendant company’s plant. That was accomplished in the following manner:

“Scrap iron was bundled up, bound together and heated to a white heat in a furnace. It was then run through a set of rolls by other employees, called roughers, and thus formed into billets some three feel in length and three inches thick; it was then passed to another set of employees, called strainers and catchers, of which plaintiff was one, who passed it through other sets of .rollers several times, reducing [725]*725it each, time in thickness and increasing its length until it reached the desired dimensions.
“The rolls at which plaintiff was engaged stood in an east-and-west direction, containing several sets of rolls about fifteen feet in length. The plaintiff occupied the north side of the string of rolls. Those working with him were on the south side of the string of rolls. Those on the south side would take a billet from the roughers and place the end of it in the rolls, the rotary motion of which would convey it to the north side, where the plaintiff would catch it with a pair of iron tongs, and place the end of it in another set of rolls beneath the ones from which it had just passed, and it would be carried back to the south side by the same means and reduced in thickness and extended in length, as previously stated. This method was continued until the bar was some thirty or forty feet in length, when the process of ‘repeating’ was begun, that is, the plaintiff would catch the end of the bar with a pair of tongs as it came through at the east end of the rolls and carry it around north in a semicircle and place the front end in the rolls at the west end of the string which so ran as to carry the bar back to the south side. By this process the bar would be coming through at the east end of the string of rolls to, the north side and at the same time it would be going through the rolls to the south side at the west end of the rolls.”

The foregoing quotation is taken from the statement of the ease in the former opinion.

The evidence showed that some eight or ten feet back from the set of rollers there was a hole made in the floor of the mill, in which an iron post was designed to be inserted, when the “repeating” process, before mentioned, was being carried on. This was intended to prevent the catcher from being caught in the loop of the bar, and drawn up to and crushed by it against [726]*726the rollers, in case the rear end thereof should for any reason hang in the roller.

That at the time of the plaintiff ’s injury,, said post was not in position, but in lieu thereof, an iron spindle and some other materials were placed on the floor, near said hole.

That while the plaintiff was engaged in the performance of his duties as a catcher, the rear end of a rod caught in the roller, and the loop thereof surrounded and knocked said iron spindle and other materials aside, and caught the plaintiff just above the ankle of the foot, and drew it up against a tub of water, which was sitting between him and the rollers, and so burned, bruised and mangled his leg, that after suffering excruciating pain and mental anguish for a year or more, it became necessary for his limb to be amputated just above the ankle.

The second trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $18,000, of which he remitted $3000', leaving $15',000 for which judgment was entered, and in due time the defendant appealed.

All of the questions except one presented by the record on the former appeal, were carefully and fully considered and disposed of by this court, in the opinion before mentioned.

Counsel for the defendant, at the second trial, retried in the circuit court all the questions passed on by this court on the former appeal, and have re-thrashed them out here on this appeal, and request us to reconsider them at this time. After a careful reexamination of the questions of fact and law presented by this record, we are satisfied that the conclusions reached, when the case was here before, were correct; and no good would be accomplished by restating or passing upon them again.

We will content ourselves at this time by first restating the question not passed upon in the former opinion, and second, the substance of the evidence [727]*727bearing upon it, all of which was not introduced at the former trial, namely: that the plaintiff was not working for the defendant at the time he was injured, but was employed by and was working for the Blue Valley Lodge No. 2, of the National Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, and that in consequence thereof, defendant company was not liable to the plaintiff for the injuries received by him.

The evidence in this case covers more than four hundred pages of printed matter, and a large portion of it relates to this question, and we will therefore only be able to set out the substance of part of it and the effect of other portions, which is as follows:

A contract between the defendant company, and said Association of Workers, which is as follows:

The portions of said document introduced in evidence being in the words and figures following:

Page No. 3. Ex. 1-A. E. P.
Sheffield, Mo.
WESTERN SCALE.
Memorandum of Agreement.
We, Kansas City Bolt & Nut Co., of the first part, and Blue Valley Lodge No. 2, State of Missouri, National Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, of the second part, do hereby agree that the following scales of prices, based upon the actual sales and shipments of iron or steel, as. arranged for in conferences, shall govern the wages of the several departments as herein stated, commencing July 1, 1902, and ending June 30, 1903.
It is further agreed that no scale shall go below the base price named on the rate selected.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 966, 245 Mo. 720, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-v-sturges-mo-1912.