Morris v. Atlas Portland Cement Co.

19 S.W.2d 865, 323 Mo. 307, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 665
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 865 (Morris v. Atlas Portland Cement 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
Morris v. Atlas Portland Cement Co., 19 S.W.2d 865, 323 Mo. 307, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 665 (Mo. 1929).

Opinions

Action to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff while in the employment of defendant Atlas Portland Cement Company, and alleged to have resulted from the negligence of defendant corporation and its foreman and vice-principal. J.H. Ruch. The petition thus states plaintiff's cause of action:

"That on or about the 14th day of October, 1924, and long prior thereto, said defendant (corporation) had adopted and was using in its quarry and plant in moving the quarried rocks cars, loaded by a steam shovel, which cars were placed and moved on tracks by means of a dinky-engine; that the defendant Earl Sampson is and was the defendant company's engineer in charge of said shovel in the loading of said cars, and the defendant J.H. Ruch is and was the *Page 316 foreman and vice-principal of the defendant company in charge of the operation of the quarry, including the loading of said cars; that on or about the date aforesaid, and prior thereto, plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant company as a switchman, and was required by the defendant company in the performance of his duties to be in said plant about and in close proximity to the cars loaded and moved by the defendants as aforesaid, as defendants knew, and that defendant habitually overloaded said cars, placing thereon large rocks and boulders over and above the limited capacity thereof, which when so placed were loose and unsupported and likely to roll about and to fall therefrom; that on the date last aforesaid the defendant Earl Sampson had loaded a certain car, along with others, to its reasonable capacity; and that thereafter the defendant J.H. Ruch, foreman and vice-principal of the defendant company, in the performance of his duties as such, negligently and carelessly ordered the defendant Earl Sampson to place upon said loaded car additional rock, including a certain large boulder, in excess of the reasonable capacity of said car, when the defendants knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, that said boulder so placed was loose and unsupported and likely to roll about and fall from said car and strike persons, including plaintiff, in the course of their ordinary duties. That thereafter plaintiff was required to be at a place near said car loaded as aforesaid, and that as the direct result of the negligence and carelessness of defendants as aforesaid, said large boulder fell from said car with great force and violence, falling upon and striking plaintiff as aforesaid, directly thereby causing" plaintiff's injuries.

The amended answer of defendants is a general denial, with pleas of contributory negligence and assumption of risk, and the further plea that, if plaintiff received any injuries in the manner alleged in the petition, then such injuries, if any, were caused by the acts of plaintiff's fellow-servants and co-employees. The reply is a conventional general denial of the averments of the answer.

The action was dismissed as to the defendant Earl Sampson, during the course of the trial. A submission of the cause to a jury resulted in a verdict of ten jurors in favor of plaintiff and against the remaining defendants, Atlas Portland Cement Company and J.H. Ruch, assessing plaintiff's damages in the sum of $20,000, and judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict. Upon consideration of a motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment, duly filed by both said defendants, the trial court ordered the plaintiff to remit from the amount of the verdict the sum of $6500, under penalty of sustaining the defendants' motion for a new trial, whereupon plaintiff entered a remittitur of $6500 in pursuance of the order of the trial court, and the defendants' motions for a new *Page 317 trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled, the original judgment was set aside, and a new judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against defendants for the sum of $13,500, with interest from March 10, 1926, the date of the original judgment. Both defendants were allowed an appeal to this court from the judgment last entered.

The evidence tends to show that plaintiff was employed by defendant corporation as a switching foreman in its quarry and cement plant located at or near Hasco, a town distant about two and one-half miles south of the city of Hannibal. At the place in question, the defendant corporation operates a quarry, which is on top of the bluff overlooking the Mississippi River. The bluff consists of limestone strata, which are loosened and broken on the top of the bluff by blasting. After the limestone rock is loosened and broken by blasting, temporary or removable railway tracks are constructed and laid, leading into the pits where the loosened rock remains after having been blasted from the top of the bluff. The series of parallel railway tracks leading to each of such pits is called a "cut," and plaintiff was working at the time of his injury in cut No. 3. Cut No. 3 consisted of three parallel tracks, extending in an east-and-west direction. The rock pit was located at the east end of the cut. The tracks were designated by numbers. The south track, or track No. 1, was known as the shovel track, upon which was operated a steam shovel. The middle track, or track No. 2, was known as the loading track. The north track, or track No. 3, was known as the set-out track. The broken and loosened rock was scooped out of the rock pit and loaded upon dump-cars by means of the steam shovel upon track No. 1, or the shovel track. When the dump-cars were to be loaded, several of the cars were pushed onto track No. 2, or the loading track, by means of a small steam locomotive, known as a "dinky-engine," and each dump-car in turn would be "spotted" or placed on the loading track alongside the steam shovel for the purpose of loading the car. After the several dump-cars were loaded they were pulled out of track No. 2 by the dinky-engine and switched onto track No. 3, or the set-out track, from whence the loaded cars were made up into a train, and later taken to the crusher, where the pieces of limestone rock are ground into cement. The injury to plaintiff occurred between tracks No. 1 and 2, that is, between the shovel track and the loading track. The distance between the inside rails of those two tracks was given by plaintiff and his witnesses as eight to twelve feet, whereas defendants' witnesses estimated the distance between the inside rails of the two tracks as being eighteen to twenty feet.

Plaintiff was injured about 4:30 o'clock on the afternoon of October 14, 1924. As foreman of the switching crew, plaintiff directed *Page 318 the "spotting" of the dump-cars for loading upon track No. 2, and the removal of such cars after they had been loaded by the steam shovel. The steam shovel was located at the east end of track No. 1, at the east end of which track was the pit of blasted rock. The steam shovel is operated by an engineer, or shovel-man, who, by means of certain mechanical appliances at his command, controls and operates a boom several feet in length, to the end of which boom is suspended a large steel dipper or scoop. The dipper is lowered by means of the boom and pushed into the blasted rock until the dipper is filled, when it is lifted and swung by the boom over the top of the dump-car, where the content of the dipper is allowed to fall from the bottom of the dipper into the dump-car immediately beneath and below the dipper. The steam shovel equipment was from 130 to 140 feet in length, excluding the length of the boom and dipper. The dump-cars were each approximately fifteen to eighteen feet long, and the customary and usual loading capacity of each dump-car was about twenty tons.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 865, 323 Mo. 307, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-atlas-portland-cement-co-mo-1929.