Reddick v. Union Electric Light & Power Co.

243 S.W. 382, 210 Mo. App. 260, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 203
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 382 (Reddick v. Union Electric Light & Power 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
Reddick v. Union Electric Light & Power Co., 243 S.W. 382, 210 Mo. App. 260, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 203 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

DAUES, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. At the trial before the court and a jury there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $1,000. Defendant appeals.

The petition alleges that plaintiff on April 10, 1919, while employed by defendant to clean certain boilers, was injured by being burned and scalded by water and steam with which he came into contact, and that such injuries resulted from the carelessness and negligence of defendant in failing to use reasonable care to furnish him with a reasonably safe place in which to work, and in ordering him to look into a fire box under the boiler when defendant knew, or could have known, that No boiler was defective and likely to cause steam and hot water to be thrown upon plaintiff.

The answer is, first, a general denial; then the defense of assumption of risk; then a plea of contributory negligence, and finally, the answer alleges that on April 21, 1919, plaintiff, for a valuable consideration, released defendant from all claims on account of injuries sustained by him, as charged in the petition, and that therefore plaintiff should be barred from maintaining this action.

The reply denies the allegations of new matter stated in the answer, and further alleges that plaintiff knew nothing of the alleged release pleaded in the answer. It alleges further that defendant’s agent, shortly after plaintiff left the hospital, where he was confined on account of said injuries, handed him a check for $17.50, and represented this check to be in payment of his straight time while he was confined in the hospital, and that such agent asked plaintiff to sign a slip of paper which said defendant’s agent represented to plaintiff to be a receipt for his straight time while he was in the hospital; that on May 6, 1919, this same agent again handed plaintiff *265 a check for $30, which he represented was in payment for work and straight time. It is further averred that plaintiff can neither read nor write, and that any release, or purported release obtained by defendant' company was through misrepresentation, fraud and deceit.

There are five separate assignments of error contained in appellant’s brief, the first of which assigns error in overruling and refusing to give an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence; the other assignments concern the giving and refusing of instructions submitting the case to the jury.

Respondent’s brief concedes that the court committed reversible error in the giving and refusing of instructions, and in confessing sucli error asks that the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded. Appellant, however, maintains that because of error committed under the first assignment, the judgment should be reversed outright. Thus the issues are definitely sharpened to this point.

.Learned counsel for appellant assert that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant, first, because there was no substantial evidence that the release was procured by fraud; secondly, because plaintiff was guilty of negligence in failing to exercise ordinary care in relying upon the alleged false representation in the procurement of the release, and in failing to exercise ordinary care to ascertain the contents of the release before he signed same. We therefore recite so much of the record evidence as becomes pertinent to these contentions.

Plaintiff, on his direct examination, testified as to his employment by the defendant as a boiler washer; that while engaged in his work in washing a boiler at the Buckingham Hotel he was injured by being scalded by hot water and steam.

Most of the cross examination of plaintiff revolved around the question of the release. Plaintiff, after the injury, was taken to the Barnes Hospital, where he remained about a week. He then went home, where he re *266 mained about two weeks longer before lie returned to work. He then went back to work, and after about two davs signed a paper, which is introduced in evidence, and which purports to release the defendant from all damages’ for the injuries so received, in consideration of carrying plaintiff on the payroll at full time during his disability and in furnishing him medical attention.

Plaintiff (on cross-examination), said he was 26 years of age; that he could neither read nor write, except to write his name, and that he had learned to write his name only a short time before while in the Army, though he admitted that he had signed his name before that time; that he had worked for the defendant company about two and a half years; that he quit and went into the Army and returned and again went to work for defendant as'a boiler washer; that before he went into the Army, J. R. Smart was a pipefitter for defendant, but when plaintiff returned Smart had become a foreman, and it was to him that he auplied for a job. Smart’s office was at Tenth and St. Charles streets in St. Louis.

Without dwelling upon the evidence concerning the facts causing the accident, the record shows that after plaintiff was injured and while he was in Barnes Hospital, another foreman for defendant named Jones, brought his wages to him. This was three and a half days’ pay at $3 per day, and the check amounted to $10.50. During the time he was at the hospital and at home he was treated by Dr. Brooks, a physician in the employ of defendant company. After plaintiff had been home for about three weeks, he went to defendant’s office at Tenth and St. Charles streets and called on Smart, who told him “to get well and come on back to work;” that he asked Smart what the company was going to do for him, and that Smart told him he did not know; that he would have to go and see the company about that.

Plaintiff was paid two checks, one for $17.50 and the other for $30. It is not clear as to the exact date of these payments, but, according to plaintiff, the pur *267 ported release was signed at the time he received the $17.50 check. Concerning the signing of the release we set ont extensively from plaintiff’s cross examination:

“Q. Now, do you recall that, on this day, he gave you a check for $17.50 or a quarter or something like that? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Now, you didn’t have any seventeen dollars and a half check coming to you for work that you had done, did you? A. No, sir.
Mr. Goodwin “ (Q.): You knew you were getting that seventeen dollars and a hálf because Smart told you you were going to get your full time, didn’t you? A. He told me he would give me full time when I wasn’t laying in the hospital. .
“Q. The first cheek you got was for time that you had worked? A. The first check.
“Q. Was for three days and a half, wasn’t it? A. Three days and a half.
“Q. That was the first check you got? A. Yes.
“Q. Now, the next check you got was for time you hadn’t worked, but you had been in the hospital and hadn’t been able to work — that was for seventeen dollars and something, wasn’t it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And then, later on, you got another check for thirty dollars? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. For time that you hadn’t worked. A.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 382, 210 Mo. App. 260, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reddick-v-union-electric-light-power-co-moctapp-1922.