Kautz v. St. Louis Refrigerator Car Co.

219 S.W. 719, 203 Mo. App. 522, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 199
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 719 (Kautz v. St. Louis Refrigerator Car 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
Kautz v. St. Louis Refrigerator Car Co., 219 S.W. 719, 203 Mo. App. 522, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 199 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

REYNOLDS, P.’ J.

Plaintiff, while in the employ of. defendant and engaged in unloading car wheels from *527 a car and placing them in one of the departments of-defendant’s plant, rolling a wheel, came in contact with another wheel, which was standing in the passageway, leaning against a lathe, and the two wheels fell on his right leg, crushing it and necessitating its amputation above the knee. Placing his damages at $20,000, plaintiff recovered a verdict for $7500. Judgment following, defendant has duly appealed.

The charge of negligence in the petition upon which the case was tried is. that defendant, through its employees, then and there by defendant intrusted and charged with the duty of providing plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work, “did negligently place a certain large iron wheel, hereinafter referred to and designated as the stationary wheel, alongside and near to the passageway over which plaintiff was at the time of receiving the injuries herein described and pursuant to his said employment so engaged in moving and transferring said car wheels, in so careless and negligent and unskillful a manner as to be liable to topple over and fall upon and into said passageway, over and along which plaintiff was. so engaged at his said work. That said stationary wheel had been and was so placed in an approximately upright position, and so slightly leaning as to be near a balance, and resting against and supported by a certain machine stationed, then and there, in said machine shop, and near to the said passageway, so that it was by reason of its approximate balance and great weight, liable in the ordinary course of the work of roll-* ing and transferring the wheels out of said car and along the said passageway, to be jarred and struck and to fall over in said passageway and injure plaintiff: That in addition to being so leant against the said machine in said approximately upright position, as aforesaid, said stationary wheel was so placed and Jeant against said machine with the tread or heavy side of the! same outwards and towards the said passageway along which plaintiff was, by defendant’s, order, so set to work, and so that the said stationary wheel, thus ..care-! *528 lessly and negligently placed and leant against said machine adjacent to and alongside of said passageway, was by reason of its said position and the said manner thereof, liable to fall or to be knocked over, in the ordinary course of the work of moving said wheels along said passageway, and to fall so as to strike persons and the plaintiff performing the said work.”

The answer, after a general denial, avers, first: Contributory negligence in carelessly and negligently rolling a car wheel against another car wheel, causing both to fall on him; then, that placing the car wheel in position was the act of a fellow servant of plaintiff engaged in a common work with plaintiff; third, assumption of risk.

The reply denies the allegations of new matter in. the answer.

There was evidence in the case to the effect that defendant owned a factory in the city of St. Louis, composed of several separate departments; one, a carpenter department, in which plaintiff usually worked; another, the mechanical or axle department, in which plaintiff was working at the time of the accident, working there under the immediate charge of one James L. French, referred to throughout as “Jim” French. On September 14, 1914, plaintiff, on reporting for work to the general foreman, one Littell, was told by Littell to go over to the axle department and help Jim French unload a carload of wheels. French was what was called a “wheel man,” and immediately in charge, under Lit-tell, as foreman of the wheel department, as it is called, of defendant’s plant. The work of this department consisted of turning axles and boring wheels, after which fitting the axles. Unloading car wheels from the cars and placing them in proper position for being worked upon, were also part of the duties of the men working in it. French had a helper whose duties were to run the lathe and help roll the car wheels and assist at all' times. As noted, the usual duties of plaintiff were in the carpenter department, but on this occasion he was *529 put to work in what was called the axle or mechanical department or shop, at the time acting as helper to Jim French, the regular helper, Louis French, being absent. Preliminary to unloading the car, under direction of French, plaintiff had built a stage and runway from the car to the shop and had cleaned up some blocks which were lying in the passageway. While he was doing this, French had moved a car wheel from a rack within the shop, which had been placed there a day or so before and was not of the wheels to he then unloaded, and had stood it against a lathe alongside.of the passageway through which the wheels were to be rolled. This wheel was placed there by French, he intending to work on it the following Monday. It was set on edge against a lathe with the flange next to the lathe and the bottom of the wheel about 8 or 9 inches away from the bottom of the lathe, leaning against the pan of the lathe, which was above the middle of the hub of the wheel. The passageway through which the wheels being unloaded were rolled ran along past this wheel. On the occasion of the accident, the runway made and some- blocks cleared out of the passageway, French and plaintiff began taking the wheels out of the car and rolling them to the racks in which they were to go. Plaintiff would go to the car, take a wheel out and roll it to the place where it was to go. French had directed where the wheels were to be placed. Plaintiff, as helper, had nothing to do with that. The wheels, when taken from the car, were rolled in a winding way around the machinery to a rack at the west side and back of the lathe. The passageway through which the wheels were rolled was wider in some places than in others, being from two to six feet wide. There • was a track on one side and machinery on the other. French had gone into the car, taken a wheel and rolled it down the stage plank and into the building and over into the rack. Plaintiff waited until French had his wheel and then he followed. He had rolled several wheels into place. When he took hold of the wheel, he *530 rolled it inside of the building and in going around a zig-zag bend that formed the passaeway, the wheel became unbalanced and “wobbled.” Pie tried to straighten it up as well as he could;' slacked up on it and had it pretty well stopped when he was passing the wheel that had been placed against the lathe by French, and his wheel scraped it on the bottom. Plaintiff .testified that he had not seen that wheel sitting there; had not noticed it before and had not thought of it tumbling over; thought it was safe inside the shop. When his wheel scraped against the bottom of the wheel leaning against the lathe, that wheel fell over and hit the wheel he was rolling and it was too late for him to save his left leg but he pulled his right leg out. The two wheels fell so fast that he did not see them coming. The wheel sitting against the lathe- stood upright, said plaintiff, and “almost fell over with the shaking of the floor.” It was sitting against the lathe with the flange or tread on the outside towards the wheel he was rolling, that is towards the passageway through which he was rolling the wheel. The wheels crushed his left leg above the knee.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 719, 203 Mo. App. 522, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kautz-v-st-louis-refrigerator-car-co-moctapp-1920.