Naeger v. Naeger

339 S.W.2d 492, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 469
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 1960
Docket30437
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 339 S.W.2d 492 (Naeger v. Naeger) 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
Naeger v. Naeger, 339 S.W.2d 492, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 469 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

RUDDY, Judge.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff. .Defendant has appealed from a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the amount of $1,000. In his original petition plaintiff sued his father, Henry J. Naeger. Later he joined his brother, Valentine N. Naeger, as a defendant. After the trial commenced plaintiff dismissed his cause of action against the father and proceeded against the brother only.

On January 15, 1958, pursuant to a request of his father, plaintiff went to the father’s farm to assist him in testing some cows for Bang’s disease. Also helping the father were the defendant, two other brothers of plaintiff, a neighbor, and a veterinarian and his helper. The method invoked on this day for testing the cows was to drive all of the cows and the bull that injured plaintiff into a cattle barn. Inside the barn was a pen about ten by twelve feet in size. The pen was in one corner of the barn and consisted of two wooden gates about five feet high which made up two sides of the pen and the two sides of the barn were the other sides of the pen. The test consisted of taking blood samples from the cows by means of a needle inserted in the neck of cow. The veterinarian took the blood samples. In order to take the sample of blood, it was necessary to drive the cow into the small pen and there, by devious and various means, seek to have the cow enter a metal chute or stanchion which opened into the pen. The cow would be restrained in the chute, the blood sample taken and then would be released.

*494 Inside the pen was a manger extending along one side of the barn wall and directly opposite the chute. This manger extended 16 inches above the ground., the outside of which was at a right angle to the ground and was used in the feeding of cattle.

Approximately fifteen cows had been put through the chute and blood samples extracted, apparently without difficulty. All that remained for testing was the three year old Black Angus bull that had witnessed the testing of the cows. Obviously, what he saw was not to his liking. Apparently, the bull entered the pen without incident. After he entered the pen no amount of cajoling, threats or enticement would drive the bull into the metal chute. He showed no inclination to move from the center of the pen. Defendant in some manner entered the pen and gained a place of safety inside the manger. At that time the bull was standing about six feet from and broadside to the manger. With the bull in this position, and defendant in the manger, defendant proceeded to rain blows on the bull with a wooden club, but without effect. The bull continued to remain unmoved.

One of the gates rested against the manger. While defendant was hitting the bull plaintiff was standing at this gate outside of the pen and, as he said, “right by the manger.” Plaintiff had a pitchfork in his hand, which he had used in persuading the cows to enter the pen and the chute. When plaintiff saw that his brother’s efforts were not meeting with success, he decided to join his brother, the defendant, in the manger and from this vantage point it was his intention to stick the bull with the pitchfork in an attempt to drive the bull into the metal chute. Defendant stopped hitting the bull with the club and at this point plaintiff opened the gate alongside of the manger and stepped into the pen. When plaintiff entered the pen, the bull was facing him. Before plaintiff reached the manger inside the pen, defendant again started hitting the bull with the club. The bull then moved in the direction of plaintiff. Plaintiff described it as follows : “After he (defendant) hit the bull, the bull came toward me. * * * It mashed me against the manger.” Plaintiff said he attempted to avoid the bull by trying to hop in the manger. He said, “I couldn’t quite make it.” The bull struck him while he was in the act of hopping into the manger. Plaintiff in further explanation of what happened said, that as he stepped inside the pen defendant started hitting the bull before he had a chance to get his pitchfork in position to protect himself and before he had a chance to reach the safety of the manger. Plaintiff’s right leg was broken at the ankle.

Plaintiff in his cross-examination admitted that the gate which he opened to enter the pen “was right up against the end of the manger.” He further admitted, as we have heretofore pointed out, that it was his intention to climb up into the manger after he got into the pen, before he would jab the bull with the pitchfork. He was then asked, “So, couldn’t you have climbed over that part of the gate that was against the edge of the manger and landed in the manger?” and he answered, “It was a lot easier to get inside the fence.” Further cross-examination developed that he thought it was easier to open the gate than to climb over the top of the gate to reach the manger. Plaintiff was the only witness to testify at the trial.

Defendant contends that plaintiff’s evidence fails to show sufficient facts from which a jury could find defendant negligent and further contends that in any event plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

In support of his first contention, plaintiff states that if a number of blows would not move the bull before plaintiff entered the pen, the conclusion is inescapable, that if the bull moved after plaintiff entered the pen, when only one blow was struck, it must have been on account of the presence of plaintiff in the pen with the pitchfork, or because the gate was open behind plaintiff, and not because of the one blow then struck by defendant. We cannot be certain that only one blow was struck. The only testi *495 mony given on this point shows that defendant started to hit the bull after plaintiff entered the pen. No place in plaintiff’s testimony was it shown that the gate was open when the hull moved. This much is certain, that plaintiff had to open the gate to get into the pen, but there is no evidence to show how far it was opened or if it was open when the bull moved towards plaintiff.

We fail to follow defendant’s reasoning when he says that because the first blow failed to move the bull, it must have moved for another reason and not because of the additional blow or blows. The sole intention of defendant in striking the bull was to make it move and that it responded immediately to defendant’s intention, after plaintiff entered the pen, was amply demonstrated by plaintiff’s testimony. We think the testimony was sufficient to permit the jury to find that it was the additional blow or blows that caused the bull to perambulate rapidly in the direction of plaintiff. The evidence does show that the bull moved when it was struck by defendant after plaintiff entered the pen.

Defendant also asserts that plaintiff was cognizant of what the defendant was doing and what he might be .expected to do with respect to trying to get the bull to leave the pen and enter the chute. In this connection, defendant further asserts that his attempt to move the bull by striking it with the wooden club was the usual, ordinary and accepted manner of doing so and that plaintiff could reasonably expect that defendant would again strike the bull and thus defendant claims there was no negligence in his behavior.

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Bluebook (online)
339 S.W.2d 492, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naeger-v-naeger-moctapp-1960.