Millsap v. Beggs

97 S.W. 956, 122 Mo. App. 1, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 526
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 97 S.W. 956 (Millsap v. Beggs) 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
Millsap v. Beggs, 97 S.W. 956, 122 Mo. App. 1, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 526 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

The defendant was the owner and operator of a wagon factory and plaintiff was his employee. In operating the factory defendant maintained therein certain shafting and machinery constituting a planer or jointer, which plaintiff charges was dangerous to persons employed in and about the plant. Plaintiff alleges that while engaged in performing services for defendant as his employee, his hand came in contact with the blades of the planer and was badly injured. He recovered judgment in the trial court for such injury.

The action is based upon the following* statute (section 6433, Revised Statutes 1899) : “The belting, shafting, gearing and drums, in all manufacturing, mechanical and other establishments in this State, when so placed as to be dangerous to persons employed therein or thereabout while engaged in their ordinary duties, shall be safely and securely guarded when possible; if not possible, then notice of its danger shall be conspicuously posted in such establishments.”

As the defendant disputes that the machinery which inflicted the injury is of the kind named in the statute, we will first determine that point, since in settling that, there follows, in reality, a determination of much of the contention between the parties. For if it is once found that the evidence places the case under the provisions of the statute, its disposition is much simplified. The machine is thus described in plaintiff’s petition, viz: a machine “consisting of a horizontal and rapidly revolving metal shaft with steel knives fastened thereon and protruding upward through a slot or opening in an iron [6]*6table, the said shaft and knives revolving at the rate of fonr thousand revolutions per minute. The machine being run by steam power transmitted by belting and used in the rapid planing and shaving of timbers.” The evidence corresponded to such description, but further showed in detail that the shaft was about twenty inches long and three inches in diameter and the knives fastened therein were fourteen inches in length and the machine was used by pushing with the hand the timber to be planed over the iron table through which the knives protruded and thus coming in contact with the knives the timber would be planed or jointed as desired.

We conclude that this horizontal instrument with the knives fastened therein was a “shafting” in the sense and meaning of the statute. . We think it wholly unlike the machine described in Smith v. Forrester Box Co., 193 Mo. 715, and that that case is not applicable.

It is conceded that there were no guards about the machine and as the statute directs that there shall be “when possible,” the plaintiff undertook to show, and introduced evidence at the tidal tending to show, that it wa,s practicable to reasonably safely guard the machine. But the statute aforesaid demands of the employer that in the event of a safeguard being “not possible” that “then notice of the danger shall be conspicuously posted.” In view of this provision, it was an unnecessary burden assumed by the plaintiff in proving negligence by showing that this machine might have been guarded; for if it is the instrumentality or machine contemplated by the statute, and, from its nature, cannot be guarded, then the duty arises to post the notice and a failure to post is negligence per se. The evident meaning of the statute is that if the machinery may be guarded and is not, it is negligence, even though a notice is posted; and if it is operated and is not guarded because it cannot be, it is still negligence unless a notice is posted. The Supreme Court of this State in an [7]*7opinion by Judge Gantt, and each of the Courts of Appeals since, decided that a failure to comply with the statute was negligence per se. [Lore v. American Mfg. Co., 160 Mo. 608; Colliot v. Mfg. Co., 71 Mo. App. 171; Stafford v. Adams, 113 Mo. App. 724; Bair v. Heibel, 103 Mo. App. 632.]

Whether, when a case is made out showing defendant’s culpability under the statute, he can be allowed recourse to the doctrine of the employee’s assumption of obvious risk as distinguished from ordinary risk (Knisley v. Pratt, 148 N. Y. 372; O’Maley v. Gas Co., 158 Mass. 135; Anderson v. Lumber Co., 67 Minn. 79) need not be considered. For, whether under certain conditions of knowledge, plaintiff assumed the'risk of injury was submitted to the jury as a question of fact in an instruction offered by defendant. And we do not think the evidence will justify us in saying that such assumption of risk was so clearly established as to justify a peremptory instruction in defendant’s behalf. So that in this case if such defense is allowable (a point we do not decide) defendant had the benefit of it.

But not withstanding the master’s guilt by noncompliance with the statute, he may yet successfully defend himself by shoAving that the employee was himself negligent in such Avay as to have contributed to his own injury. For though no guards are placed AAdien they might have been, and though (if they could not have been) no notice Avas posted, yet the employee cannot knowingly thrust himself against the dangerous machinery. There was such an issue in this case and it Avas recognized by the trial court in giving instructions for each party on that head. The verdict of the jury in plaintiff’s favor has abundant evidence in this respect in its support. If the danger in Avorking as plaintiff was when injured Avas not so patent and obvious that a man of common prudence Avould not have been engaged as was the plaintiff, he should not be held guilty of con-[8]*8tributary negligence. [Pauck v. Beef & Provision Co., 159 Mo. 467, 478; Settle v. Railroad, 127 Mo. 336.] Tbe evidence which will apply to this branch of the case is interwoven throughout the record and we have given it that thorough consideration which the earnestness of defendant’s counsel in pressing the point demands. It is not practicable to state the evidence in detail, but in a general Avay it may be said that that part of it in plaintiff’s behalf (which, since the verdict, must be accepted as true) shows that he Avas not a skilled mechanic, that he had only been engaged in and about the factory for a few months and about this machine for only a few Aveeks and that his usual duty in working Avith the machine was in planing “axle-trees” for Avagons; but that at the particular time AVhen he was hurt he Avas engaged, at the request of a fellow workman Avho brought it to him, -in planing a small piece of timber used in and about the construction of wagons, and not nearly so wide as the knives. In performing this work, he placed the timber upon the iron table and with his hand near, but- not on, the end, he pushed it forward until the other end came in contact with the revolving knives, he continued to push it forAvard with his hand resting on the timber, until the timber got so far along as to bring his hand over the knives, the jarring effect of the work jostled his hand off the side of the timber and onto the knives, -causing the injury. As already intimated, the record abounds in evidence that may be said to refer, by inference or otherAvise, in greater or less degree, to the question whether the danger, in all the circumstances shoAvn, Avas of such open, certain and apparent character as to cause any prudent person to refuse to do the work. The effort of defendant’s counsel has been to lead us to say that it was and that it should have been so declared as a matter of law. We cannot go so far as .that. We can do no more than to say that it presented a case for the judgment of the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W. 956, 122 Mo. App. 1, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millsap-v-beggs-moctapp-1906.