O'Neil v. C. Young & Sons' Seed & Plant Co.

58 Mo. App. 628, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 369
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 58 Mo. App. 628 (O'Neil v. C. Young & Sons' Seed & Plant Co.) 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
O'Neil v. C. Young & Sons' Seed & Plant Co., 58 Mo. App. 628, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 369 (Mo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

.Biggs, J.

This action is one to recover damages-for personal injuries received by the plaintiff through the fall of a hand hoist or elevator, under which he stood while lifting it. The defense is a general denial and the plea of contributory negligence. . On the trial of the cause before a jury the plaintiff recovered a verdict both against the 'defendant corporation and John Young,who is president of the corporation. The defendants appeal and assign for error that the court committed error in not requiring plaintiff to elect'on what cause of action he would proceed, and that, it erred in admitting illegal evidence against defendants and in its charge to the jury. The defendants also contend that their demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained, because the fact that the accident was the result of the plaintiff’s own negligence was evident from all the testimony; also that there is no evidence whatever on which a verdict and judgment against John Young can be sustained; also that their motion for new trial should have been sustained.

The petition states that the elevator in question was used by the defendant corporation in its business in the city of St, Louis; that it ran from the ground floor to the second floor of the building, was operated by hand and had a hoisting capacity of over three hundred pounds. The petition then states that there was, at and anterior to the accident, an ordinance in force in the city of St. Louis, requiring the inspection of all hoists and elevators of this character by a city official appointed for that purpose at least once every six months, and that the defendants neglected to comply with the provisions of said ordinance. The petition [630]*630further charges that the wire cable by which the elevator was operated was unsound, imperfect, weak and unsafe, for the purposes for which it was used, which facts were known to the defendants, or by the use of ordinary care might have been known; that the plaintiff was an employee of the, defendant corporation, and was requested by the defendant Young to hoist a load of glass on said elevator, and that, while he was so engaged, the wire cable by means of which it was operated broke on account of its unsound and imperfect condition, precipitating the car or cage of the elevator upon the plaintiff, and causing him the injuries complained of.

At the trial the defendants moved the court to compel the plaintiff to elect on what cause of action he would proceed. This motion was overruled, and rightly so. The petition states but one cause of action, to wit: “The defendants’ negligence in operating the hoist with a wire cable insufficient for that purpose, which gave rise to the accident.” The petition is technically defective in not charging that the failure to comply with the ordinance was the cause of the accident, which ought to be done, if that is relied upon as an element of recovery; but this defect could not be reached by a motion to elect.

When the ordinance above mentioned was read in evidence, the defendants excepted to it on the sole ground that it had not been shown that the lift or hoist in question had a lifting capacity of over three hundred pounds. This objection was properly overruled. Several witnesses had testified anterior to this that a hoist, constructed as this was, and operated by a half-inch wire tiller rope as this was, had a lifting capacity of over three hundred pounds. It is true there was nq, evidence in the case that the hoist was ever used anterior to the date of the accident for hoisting a weight of [631]*631three hundred pounds or more, or that it was furnished for purposes of lifting any such weight. In determining, however, the applicability of the ordinance, we think the capacity of the hoist or elevator, and not the purposes for which it is actually used, must be considered. Any other rule would render the desired control by the city wholly impracticable. We will refer to this subject hereafter in another connection. Had the defendants objected to the ordinance on the ground that the petition did not charge its nonobservance as causingthe accident, the plaintiff might have amended his petition in that respect. An objection of that kind can not be entertained, when first made after verdict. The objection should have been made by requiring the plaintiff to make his petition more definite.

We find that the instructions given on behalf of the plaintiff are erroneous. They lose sight of the proposition, which underlies all these cases, that the master’s liability to the servant for injuries arising to him from defective appliances arises not from the fact that the appliances are defective, but from the fact that they are not reasonably fit for the purposes for which they are furnished. The master’s duty to the servant is to furnish machinery and appliances which are reasonably safe, sound, and sufficient for the purposes for which they are furnished, and to exercise the necessary inspection to keep them in such condition. Smith v. Railroad, 69 Mo. 37, 38; Tabler v. Railroad, 93 Mo. 79; Bowen v. Railroad, 95 Mo. 268; Worheide v. Car Co., 32 Mo. App. 367; Flynn v. Bridge Co., 42 Mo. App. 529.

While these instructions were unquestionably misleading, it does not clearly appear that an exception was saved to their being given at the time, and, under the technical rules which require that such exception [632]*632should appear of record, a reversal of the judgment for this reason would not be warranted.

The next error complained of is that the court refused to nonsuit the plaintiff, although the fact that his contributory negligence caused the accident appears from all the evidence. The plaintiff testifies that he was sent for this glass on the afternoon of the day in question, it being needed to repair the glass roof which had been broken by a hail storm; that, arriving at defendants’ premises, lie carried one of the boxes by hand up to the second story, where the defendant Toung and some employees were engaged in glazing; that Toung complained of plaintiff’s delay in bringing the glass, and asked him if he could not bring it any faster; that plaintiff thereupon told him he could bring it all up if he put them on the elevator, and that Toung told him to do so. On cross-examination, hoWever, the plaintiff recited' this conversation as follows: “He asked me if I could bring them up faster; and I told him yes, if I put on the elevator, and he said to do so; he may have said do so, he may have said bring them up, or something of that kind. Q. He did not tell you how many boxes to put on the elevator? Á. No, sir, no number at all. Q. And you went down and of your own free will put nine boxes on? A. Tes, sir.”

We may add that the plaintiff, on the point that he was directed to bring up any of the glass on the elevator, is contradicted both by Toung and by another disinterested witness who was present at the time. They both testified that nothing whatever was said by Toung to plaintiff as to bringing up the residue of the glass. Giving, however, to the plaintiff’s evidence its fullest force, it has no reasonable tendency to show that Toung told him to bring up all the glass at one time on the elevator. The plaintiff thereupon went [633]*633down and piled all the glass on the elevator. In so doing he requested one Shelton, an employee of the defendants, to assist him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Mo. App. 628, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneil-v-c-young-sons-seed-plant-co-moctapp-1894.