McCurry v. Thompson

181 S.W.2d 529, 352 Mo. 1199, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 599
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 5, 1944
DocketNo. 38627.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 529 (McCurry v. Thompson) 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
McCurry v. Thompson, 181 S.W.2d 529, 352 Mo. 1199, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 599 (Mo. 1944).

Opinions

Action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act (45 U.S.C.A., Sec. 51, et seq.) for $50,000 damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained on account of defendant's negligence. Verdict and judgment were for defendant and plaintiff has appealed.

A statement of the evidence most favorable to plaintiff is required. Plaintiff was employed in defendant's shop at Hoisington, Kansas. On March 27th, 1941, he and other employees were engaged in shortening an iron drawbar of a locomotive used in interstate commerce. One end of the drawbar was heated and laid across an anvil and hammered with a steel ram while the other end was supported by a chain. The ram used was an 8 foot 4 inch steel bar, weighing 436 pounds. It was 7 inches in diameter at one end and only about 2 inches at the other. An eyebolt had been put through the ram so that when suspended by the eyebolt the ram would hang level.

In order to use the ram, it was supported from the ceiling by a short chain, a 14 foot iron bar with a hook at each end and an open link connecting with the eyebolt of the ram. When the ram was in use a man stood on either side of it and swung it like a pendulum, while plaintiff stood at the small end of the ram to guide it so the large end would hit the heated end of the drawbar.

When the work was finished, plaintiff and the two men working with him swung the ram toward the drawbar, but with the large heavy end of the ram raised high enough to pass over the drawbar. They then let this end down on top of the drawbar by raising the small end of the ram. [531] After having placed as much of the weight of the ram as possible on the drawbar, the three men continued to raise *Page 1204 the small end of the ram to disconnect the hook or open link on the rod from the eyebolt on the ram and, in order to do so, the small end of the ram had to be raised higher than the top of the drawbar. At this time plaintiff stood at the small end of the ram, had his hands around it and had, with the aid of the others, raised it to his chest to have enough slack for the disconnection to be made. Employees Whitt and Jonas were standing on either side of the ram assisting plaintiff, to support the small end of the ram. Plaintiff said that immediately after the rod was disconnected from the eyebolt of the ram, and while all three were holding the ram, Whitt and Jonas "turned loose and jumped away," jumped to one side, dropped it, and let plaintiff have the weight they were holding; that, at the same time, the big end of the ram dropped to the ground and plaintiff got a blow on his chest that knocked him against a big steam hammer; and that "it just felt like something burst, just like a knife or something went through there." Three or four minutes later, plaintiff fell to the ground and he was then taken to the hospital.

At the time Whitt and Jonas released the ram and jumped away, they were standing close to it and had their backs to plaintiff. Plaintiff could not see what they were doing. He did not see them let loose, but he got the weight of the ram when they turned loose and about that time the big end of the ram hit the floor and he got the blow. The ram did not turn or roll off the drawbar and plaintiff didn't pull it off, or know how it got off. It fell and the motion of the ram knocked plaintiff backward and he let go of the ram. He didn't know the ram was loosened or unhooked until it hit the ground. Later, plaintiff's chest was swollen and black and blue from the blow.

Plaintiff further testified that he knew the ram was pushed upon the drawbar for the purpose of being lowered to the ground; that he knew it was going to be unhooked; that he didn't know it had been unhooked; that he had given no notice to drop the ram; that neither of the men had said a word; that they had never dropped the ram that way before; that it was the custom, after the heavy end of the ram was on the drawbar, for all three to continue to hold on to the ram until plaintiff (the end man) said "all right" and then all turned it loose and dropped it to the ground; that after a signal by him "they would give it a pull and jump to one side"; and that that was the way they always did it. Plaintiff said that rolling the ram off the drawbar was not the way they took the ram down. Other facts will be stated in the course of the opinion.

The cause was submitted upon the second assignment of negligence in the petition, to wit, "that although there was a long established practice and custom on the part of the defendant's employees which was well known to the plaintiff and the defendant's employees that after having finished work with the steel ram . . . the said employees . . . would lift same so that the steel rod could be unhooked *Page 1205 therefrom and to hold up the weight of said ram until all of said employees were in position to drop said ram without injury to said employees and . . . not to release their hold or drop said ram until proper warning had been given that they were about to do so and upon a signal from said employees, the said defendant's employees and servants, Edward Jonas and Jack Whitt, in violation of said custom and practice, carelessly and negligently, without giving any warning or signal to plaintiff that they were about to do so or without receiving any signal or warning from the plaintiff for them to do so or that he was in a position of safety, carelessly and negligently let go of said steel ram suddenly and permitted the full weight thereof to strike against the plaintiff and to fall upon him causing his injuries as aforesaid."

[1] Appellant assigns error on the action of the court in giving Instructions G, H, I, and L, requested by defendant. Respondent insists that the instructions are immaterial because plaintiff failed to make a case for the jury. Respondent contends that "there is no evidence whatever to sustain the charge (of negligence) in the petition"; that there was no proof that appellant was injured by the sudden release of the ram; that appellant "nowhere testified that he received his injury when Whitt and Jonas let go of the ram," but claims he received his injury "when the ram fell . . . off the drawbar onto the ground." It is respondent's theory that there was no causal connection between the alleged negligent conduct of Jonas and Whitt and appellant's injury; and respondent insists [532] that this court should hold, as a matter of law, that the negligence charged was not the legal or proximate cause of appellant's injuries. We think the evidence was sufficient for the triers of the fact to draw the inference that the sudden release of the ram by Whitt and Jonas threw the weight on appellant and caused the heavy end of the ram to slide or fall off the top of the drawbar and thus caused the small end of the ram to strike appellant. In fact respondent so concedes by further argument that "there was no proof that would support a judgment under the petition," because "the negligence in the petition was the sudden letting go of the ram, and the letting of the weight thereof fall upon plaintiff causing his injury," while "the theory submitted under the plaintiff's instruction and under the plaintiff's owntestimony was negligence in dropping the ram and causing the large end of the ram to fall from the drawbar on which it was resting and strike the ground, and causing the small end of the ram to strike plaintiff." (Italics ours.) We think the evidence warranted a finding that the negligence charged was the proximate or legal cause of plaintiff's injury, since it appears that the injury to appellant was the natural and probable consequence of the negligence shown and that appellant's injury ought reasonably to have been foreseen in the light of the attending circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 529, 352 Mo. 1199, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccurry-v-thompson-mo-1944.