Mead v. Corbin Equipment, Inc.

586 S.W.2d 388, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2462
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 31, 1979
DocketNo. 30100
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 586 S.W.2d 388 (Mead v. Corbin Equipment, Inc.) 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
Mead v. Corbin Equipment, Inc., 586 S.W.2d 388, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2462 (Mo. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

MANFORD, Judge.

This is an action for wrongful death brought by a surviving spouse. Upon trial, the court directed a verdict for respondents on Count II of the petition, and the jury entered verdict for respondents on Count I of the petition. Appeal is upon both verdict entries. Affirmed.

A brief recital of the facts is necessary to effect disposition of this matter.

The deceased, Donald Mead, was an employee of Continental Steel and Conveyor Co., an independent contracting firm which had been retained by respondent Carnation Company to do certain work upon a trash compacting machine.

At this juncture, the parties should be identified. The Carnation Company was the owner of the trash compactor and it was at or upon its plant site that Donald Mead met his demise.

Dempster Brothers, Inc. was the manufacturer of the trash compactor and at the time of decedent’s death, it was a wholly owned subsidiary of Carrier Corporation. It no longer is an individual corporation because on October 31, 1973, it became known as Dempster Brothers, Inc., Division of Carrier Corporation. This identifies Carrier Corporation d/b/a Carrier Air Conditioning Company, also joined herein. For purposes herein, these two respondents are identified simply as Carrier.

Corbin Equipment, Inc. is the distributor for Carrier. (Corbin Equipment, Inc. is hereinafter referred to as Corbin.) The trash compactor was sold by Corbin for Carrier to Wheeling and Company. Wheeling and Company was the installing and servicing company for the compactor, and although originally joined as a defendant, appellant dismissed as against Wheeling.

Appellant’s amended petition was m two counts. Count I was upon the theory of strict liability. Count II was upon the theory of negligence. Both counts were against all defendants.

Prior to trial, respondent Carnation Company filed a motion to strike Count I of the petition as to Carnation Company pursuant to Rule 55.27(e). This motion was sustained by the trial court. At commencement of trial, Count II stood as against all respondents, and Count I stood as against all respondents, except Carnation Company.

The decedent, Donald Mead, was crushed to death by a trash compactor. This trash compactor was of a commercial type identified as SP42-50. Donald Mead was the job site foreman for Continental Steel and Conveyer Company which had contracted with Carnation Company on a variety of jobs. These jobs included installing a steel platform frame so at a later time, forklift trucks could exit the Carnation Company plant onto the platform and move onto a dockboard covering the compactor.

The compactor is a relatively large piece of machinery. It extends some 15 feet north of the Carnation Company plant, is 98 inches wide and is some 62 inches above ground. The compactor internally contains a “ramhead”, which by hydraulic power, slides along channels on each internal side of the compactor. The stroke of the ram-head or packerhead covers some 78-80 inches in a north-south direction. The trash is moved into the receptacle part of the unit with 50,800 pounds of pressure or force. A complete cycle of the ramhead or packer-head is approximately 100 seconds. The forward stroke requires some 60 seconds with the backward or return stroke encompassing some 40 seconds.

The work adjacent to and upon the compactor by Mead and his two co-workers had commenced and continued off and on for some three to four months prior to the fatality. The co-workers were identified as Maurice Suesens and Curtis Earlywine, both of whom were upon the scene at the time of the fatality.

[390]*390On the date in question, employee Sues-ens was performing a welding chore. He was on a metal platform above and to the east of the compactor. His position placed him next to the dockboard of the compactor. This dockboard is a flat-surfaced area of heavy meshed wire, sturdy enough to walk upon. By virtue of its “mesh” character, one can see through it into the top of the compactor in the precise area where the ramhead moves back and forth through its compacting cycle.

At this moment, the decedent and coworker Earlywine were working alongside the compactor. Both were on the ground along the northeast side, trying to fit a piece of checkerplate into position for welding.

It should be pointed out that this compactor, when sold and delivered, did not include a dockboard as referred to above, or any supporting framework therefor. It was such items, along with other additions and modifications to the compactor, that the decedent and his co-workers were engaged in or working on at the time of this fatality.

Prior to the particular day and upon the day of this fatal accident, the compactor was in continued use and the decedent and his co-workers performed their tasks with the compactor running. As Suesens was performing his particular welding task, sparks from the welding operation ignited trash and debris which had collected in the area on top of the compactor beneath the dockboard. Suesens observed a fire and advised the decedent.

When the decedent realized there was a fire, he and Earlywine removed a portion of the checkerplate, permitting them to move toward the south end of the compactor where the fire was located. When Suesens first noticed the fire, the ramhead was fully retracted or toward the south end of its stroke. When decedent and Earlywine moved toward the fire, the ramhead was moving north. Decedent and Earlywine crawled back (south) toward the fire to a point about four feet from the rear or south end of the compactor. This location included a vertical support pipe for the dockboard which had been installed. At this moment, the ramhead was continuing in a north direction, and it passed within inches of decedent’s nose. As it passed, decedent and Earlywine brushed off burning debris from the ramhead. Earlywine departed that precise location to get” a fire extinguisher and decedent remained. As Earlywine departed, decedent inserted the upper portion of his body into the area of the moving ram-head. At this point in time, the ramhead was still moving with or in a compacting stroke. Decedent was attempting to move the fire and debris out of the machine. Earlywine, in going for a fire extinguisher, reached the same general area of his coworker Suesens. At this point, the ram-head was in a retracting stroke, moving south. Both Suesens and Earlywine hollered to decedent to clear himself. Suesens testified he yelled for decedent to get out of there. Suesens further testified decedent made no response to his warning.

Earlywine testified he yelled at decedent, “Get out of there, Don. I’m getting a fire extinguisher,” or “Watch that God damn thing, Don, watch that ram.” Earlywine further testified, “I seen him (meaning decedent) turn his head like this and look back.” The looking back, as the evidence establishes, was toward the north or toward the ram.

The decedent did not remove himself, and the ram continued its retracting stroke. The time lapse from the warnings of Sues-ens and Earlywine until decedent was crushed was 10-12 seconds. As decedent was removed, it was discovered the ram-head had caught the small of his back and crushed that portion of his body against the third vertical (third from the south end of the compactor) support pipe and the ram-head, and his skull had been crushed between the ramhead and the second vertical support pipe.

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Bluebook (online)
586 S.W.2d 388, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mead-v-corbin-equipment-inc-moctapp-1979.