Kolbow v. Haynes-Landenberg Manufacturing Co.

3 S.W.2d 226, 318 Mo. 1243, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 639
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 226 (Kolbow v. Haynes-Landenberg Manufacturing 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
Kolbow v. Haynes-Landenberg Manufacturing Co., 3 S.W.2d 226, 318 Mo. 1243, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 639 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

Plaintiff, an employee of defendant, sued for damages on account of personal injuries. To plaintiff’s evidence defendant filed a demurrer which, April 28, 1924, was sustained. Whereupon plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit -with leave,'thereafter filed *1245 bis motion for new trial which was overruled, and he appéaled. The case was sent to the St. Louis Court of Appeals and for want of jurisdiction was transferred to this court.

The defendant conducted a manufacturing plant on Forest Park Boulevard, where it was engaged in renovating, assembling, repairing and cleaning furnaces and heating plants. The plaintiff was a sheet-metal worker employed by the defendant, and November 29, 1922, was ordered to go to a building, 4110 Louisiana Avenue, St. Louis, for the purpose of repairing a furnace and heating plant, located in the basement. He testified that he had been in the employ of the defendant about three months repairing furnaces at private residences, to which he was sent for the purpose; that it was the practice of the defendant to inspect repair jobs before sending out workmen. The inspector would make report and then workmen would be sent to make the repairs. In his words!: “The foreman just turns over repair slips to us and we take the items that are on the repair slips, and if the items are not delivered Ave go to the stock room and take the balance of the material with us and go out to the job.” On this occasion he Avas sent to the place mentioned, for the purpose of making repairs Avhich the inspector had found to be necessary.

The instructions on the order which he got at that time AA'ere that the dust box and the standpipe were to be replaced; also a furnace elboAA'. Then he describes the job as follows:

“In commencing the Avork the outer easing and all the warm-air pipes are removed first; we take off this sheet metal casing and disconnect the hot-air pipes. I didn’t do any repair work on that casing ; the object in taking- it off Avas to get to the interior of the furnace and to remove the defective parts of the furnace.”

He said that after taking off the outer easing the next AA'ork was to remove heat drums and all the bolts on the top and bottom of the heat drums. Then he continued:

“To remoA'e the standpipe it is customary to chisel all the old bolts off. We never salvage any of them. They are always chiseled off and replaced AA'ith new ones, due to the fact to save time. That is AA'hat I actually did in this case, and in that respect I folloAved the custom of the trade. To chisel off a bolt you use about an eighteen-inch chisel AA'ith a tAvo-pound hammer, and you strike the head of the bolt a bloAA' AA'ith your chisel. The effect of that upon the head of the bolt is that it just bloAA's right off. The bolts, from the constant heat, crystallize, and it flies off.
“When the head flies off AA'hat happens to the standpipe? Well, at times, AA'hen they are made a trifle large, they sort of bulge out. . . . When I struck the standpipe, I don’t knoAv AA'hether it Avas through a bloAA' I hit the pipe or whether the hammer hit it, but some *1246 thing flew into my eye and I couldn’t see what stuff went into my eye, and I closed my eyes and walked away from it at the time being.”

He then testified that he finished his job, and went to the doctor, who had him come back the next day, when the doctor-removed from his eye some hard particles which had got into it. The injury was painful, but from the evidence it does not appear that his sight was greatly impaired or his health seriously injured. The grounds of negligence upon which he relied for recovery were:

First: A violation of Sections 6817, 6818, Revised Statutes 191!).

Second: That the employer failed to furnish plaintiff a safe place to- work, and had not warned plaintiff of danger of which the defendant should have known by inspection of the furnace to be repaired.

Third: That the place was insufficiently lighted.

Fourth: That it was customary to furnish goggles to one engaged in such repair work, and that the defendant negligently failed to furnish goggles.

I. Section 6817, Revised Statutes 1919, provides that every employer of labor engaged in carrying on a work which may produce illness or disease peculiar to the work or process carried on, or which subjects employees to danger of disease in-ci¿ent †0 such work, shall for the protection of employees adopt an approved'and effective device “for the prevention of such industrial or occupational diseases as are incident to such work.”

Section 6818. Revised Statutes 1919, provides the carrying on of any process or manufacture in which antimony, arsenic, etc., or “any poisonous chemicals, minerals, acids, fumes, vapors, gases or other substances are generated, . . . used or handled by employees in harmful quantities, or under harmful conditions, . . . are hereby declared to be especially dangerous to the health of 1hc employees. ’ ’

These sections are designed to protect employees against exposure to disease which are incident to the work called “occupational diseases,” and any manufacturer or laborer in which certain poisonous substances are used, or with which an employee comes in contact, is declared to be dangerous to the health of the employees. The claim here is that the particles which got into the plaintiff’s eye were crystallized soot, caused to be crystallized by the use of what plaintiff terms a soot remover. It is none of the articles specifically mentioned in Section 6818, and in order to be within the terms of either section it would have to come under the designation of “poisonous chemicals, minerals, acids, fumes, vapors, gases, or other substances,”

Plaintiff testified:

*1247 “Before I went out there I had not been told anything about soot remover having been used in this furnace. 1 am not familiar with soot remover and I cannot tell wha.t effect it would have on the eye; I am not a chemist.”

As to the stuff which got into his eye, he said:

“From my experience with ordinary soot this was not ordinary soot that fell into my eye. . . .
“It appeared to me as though it was some sort of chemical matter in there and it crystallized. At times T have met that condition before. From my experience in the trade T would say that the part inside. the dust box and standpipe, well, the walls of it were all coated with soot that had been crystallized; the inside had been coated with crystallized soot, and the walls had rust holes in them.
“Tt is a chemical process that is used in the furnace which is probably sold to people in the effort to remove soot from their furnaces.”

After stating how the doctor picked the pieces out of his eye, he said:

“I looked at the pieces; they were pieces, T should say, about the size of a pin head and they were shaped on the principle of a pin head, being flat and roundi; they were a black glossy substance.”

The physician who removed them. Doctor Kemp, testified:

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 226, 318 Mo. 1243, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kolbow-v-haynes-landenberg-manufacturing-co-mo-1928.