Kane v. Falk Co.

93 Mo. App. 209, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 357
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 Mo. App. 209 (Kane v. Falk 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
Kane v. Falk Co., 93 Mo. App. 209, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 357 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BROADDHS, J.

— The plaintiff’s cause of action as alleged is substantially as follows: On April 15, 1900, he was working as a common laborer for the defendant corporation, which at that time was engaged in constructing a part of the Metropolitan Street Railway in Kansas City, Missouri, near the corner of Eighth and Wyandotte streets in said city; that while so engaged as a common laborer for the defendant, with ■other laborers, and while in the act of assisting other employees of the defendant in moving and placing a large and heavy ■steel or iron rail, his right foot, ankle and leg, were injured by reason of said rail falling upon his foot, ankle and leg, on account of the negligence of the defendant. The negligence is ■alleged to have been in the defendant negligently hitching a team of unruly and incompetent horses, unused to the work, to said rail, and then negligently starting said horses without warning to the plaintiff of the intention to do so, by a driver who was incompetent and reckless, thus throwing said rail over and upon plaintiff’s foot and crushing it. And it is further alleged that defendant, instead of ordering said rail to be moved by hand, negligently used the combination of horsepower and hand-power in moving said rail. And further that defendant neglected to use proper and ordinary precaution against the turning and falling of said rail upon plaintiff’s foot.

The defendant’s answer was a general denial and an allegation of contributory negligence upon the part of the plaintiff.

[212]*212The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,800, which the court, upon motion of the defendant, set aside on the ground that “the evidence adduced in the cause does not support the verdict.” The court also sustained defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment, from which action of the court in setting aside said verdict and arresting the judgment, the plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence showed that the usual and ordinary way of moving the rails used in the construction of said work, was by the use of hand-power alone, or by the use of horse-power alone, although there is some evidence to the effect that sometimes they were used together for that purpose. The rails in question were about sixty feet long and weighed over one ton each, and when moved by hand-power, the method for doing so was for about twenty-five men with iron tongs to seize the rail and pull or shove it along to the place intended. The rail in question was larger and heavier than ordinary, and had a curvature. A team of horses were hitched to it by order of the defendant’s foreman, but as they were unable to start with it, the said foreman ordered the men to take hold with their tongs and assist the horses. The plaintiff and other laborers obeyed the order, the plaintiff taking his position on the inside of the curve. The combined strength of the men and horses proved sufficient to move the rail, and while it was being thus moved, the rail fell upon plaintiff’s foot and crushed it. The witnesses differ somewhat as to how the plaintiff was injured.

Eor a better understanding of the case, the principal facts of the testimony of the different witnesses are given. The plaintiff’s testimony was, that they had carried the rail without the aid of horses, that he never saw before one moved by combining the force of both men and horses, that after the driver, by the order of the foreman, hitched his team to the rail, but as they were unable to move it, upon orders of the foreman, he and the other laborers, took hold (he on the inside of the [213]*213curve) of the rail, and after it was moved a short distance, it swung over and caught him and he was dragged by it for about three feet. He stated that he had been working for defendant for about eight months, a part of which time he was engaged in helping to lay rails.

Thomas Daily testified, that he was injured' at the same time plaintiff was, by the rail getting on his foot; that the usual and ordinary way of moving these rails was by hand for short distances and by horses for longer distances; that he never saw a rail moved by both men and horses,, that they had moved a similar rail from the same place by hand; that the turning of the rail caught himself and plaintiff; that this was caused by changing the direction they had started from a north to a northeast course.

W. C. Maxwell testified that he did not have a hold upon the rail just at the time the accident occurred; that the foreman ordered the men to take hold of the rail and assist the horses, but to let loose when the rail began to move, and to stand back; that when the rail made a swing to the northeast, the curved end at the rear passed over Dailey’s foot, and as he looked he saw the foreman motion to the man to come back to the assistance of plaintiff whose foot was then under the rail; and that plaintiff got his foot caught in the street car track and was thrown down. He heard the foreman call to the men to look out and get out of the way.

Michael Mallon testified that he had had long experience as foreman and superintendent of construction in similar work and that he had never known a rail of the kind moved by combining the forces of men and horses.

Patrick Fleming, on the part of the defendant, testified that after the horses, by the help of the men, got the rail started, the men all let loose of the rail and got back from it, then the team of horses stopped a while; that when they started again the driver gave the team a swing, and some one called to the men to look out, at which time the plaintiff started back [214]*214and he fell over and the rail ran up on his leg; and that he never saw a rail moved before this one by the combined use of men and horses.

Cornelius Killiher testified that he was the defendant’s foreman in charge of the men at work at the time of the accident to the plaintiff; that when he went to move the curved rail in question, he caused a team of horses to be hitched to it, and, as the team could not pull it, he ordered the men to take hold with their tongs and assist; that they moved the rail in this manner a short distance and then halted; that as the team started again, the curved part of the rail caught against the curbing of the street, or something he could not tell what, which caused it to go over; and that he warned the men when they started to hold on with their tongs, as the rail was crooked and liable to bounce. He stated that when he had rails to move a distance of fifty feet he always moved them hy a team of horses, if one was around, and that if there was only one team, and it could not move a rail, the men helped with their tongs, that the object in using the men was to give the horses a start.

M. Hager, the teamster, testified that the men got hold of the rail with their tongs, and in this way it was moved a short distance when the team stopped, then the men took hold again and another start was made,'when the rail hit something which caused it to bounce and it got onto plaintiff’s foot.

T. P. Norton testified that he was holding the chain that was attached to the doubletrees; that the team of horses could not pull the rail, and the foreman told the men to take hold with their tongs and help, and to hold on, for if it hit anything it was liable to bounce. He gave the order before they started; and when the rail started it struck one of the paving blocks which raised it and slid it over, and in this way it caught the men. He stated that he saw rails moved in the same way previous to the occasion mentioned, but never saw any other foreman but Mr. Killiher do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 Mo. App. 209, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kane-v-falk-co-moctapp-1902.