Rhomberg v. Israel

296 S.W. 860, 222 Mo. App. 238, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 166
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 296 S.W. 860 (Rhomberg v. Israel) 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
Rhomberg v. Israel, 296 S.W. 860, 222 Mo. App. 238, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 166 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

— This is an action in damages for personal injury. The suit was instituted against the Baker Ice Machine Company, a corporation engaged in installing ice machines and apparatus for the manufacture and preservation of ice, E. Louis Mertz, foreman of said corporation, and Charles Israel, doing business as tbe Israel *239 Motor Transfer Company. Before tlxe suit was tried, the Baker lee Machine Company compromised with plaintiff for $2500, and the cause was dismissed as to that company and its foreman, Mertz. The eatise proceeded to trial against defendant Israel, resulting in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $5000. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled and defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff was a boiler maker and at the time the injury occurred, July 19, 1923, was in the employ of the Baker Ice Machine Company and under the direction of its foreman, Mertz, was engaged in installing ice machine equipment in the basement of the Kansas City Athletic Club building at the northwest corner of Eleventh street and Baltimore avenue in Kansas City, Mo. As part of the apparatus being so installed by the Baker lee Machine Company was a large steel tank in two sectioxxs, said sections to be lowered separately. The one being lowered at the time of the accident was about three feet loxig, six feet wide and six feet deep, made of three-eights inch steel and weighing about 5000 pounds. The steel tank had been sold to the Ice Machine Company by the Missouri Boiler Works Company and the latter company had employed defendant Israel Motor Transfer Company to'deliver it to the lee Machine Company “on truck” at the Athletic. Club' building. The Ice Machine Company had employed the same transfer company to lower the tank into the basement of the building. For this purpose the Israel Company had sent to the building site an automobile truck to which was attached a winch, a part of which was a drum or spool over or around which ran a wire cable. This drum was operated by eoxmecting a clutch thereto attached, with the motive machinery of the truck. The movement of the drum then would cause the cable to be wound up and thus pull the attached load! It .appears there was no reverse power to unwind the cable from the drum but the cable was unwound by disconnecting the clutch from the motor of the truck, thus permitting the load attached to the cable to pull it backwards, the lowering operation being controlled by the brakes.

The truck to which the winch was attached was placed on the east side of the Athletic Club building on Baltimore avenue, adjacent to a hole in the sidewdlk, about sixteen feet long and twelve to fourteen feet wide. The sectioix of the tank in question was unloaded from a trailer attached to the truck, by means of chains; one end of the cable wound around the drum was attached to the chains and the section of the tank was pushed and “pinched” over to where it could be balanced and lowered through the hole to the basement floor. In this process, and before the floor was reached, some part of the lowering apparatus gave way and permitted the tank to fall to the floor of the basement. It then became necessary to raise the tank sufficiently to allow rollers to be- placed thereunder so that the tank might the more easily be placed where it was intended to be installed. One Campbell *240 and two other men employed by Israel had been sent with the tank, the winch and other apparatus for lowering the tank into the .basement, pursuant to arrangements made a day or two prior.

There was testimony tending to show that when the section of the tank fell into the basement, as above stated, it lodged against the east wall thereof. Israel’s foreman, Campbell, testified that the tank fell into a jam between the- east wall and a column located in the basement, and had to he pulled out. It is shown that a steel beam was placed across said hole in the sidewalk extending .east and west; that a pulley or block was lashed to, it.and the cable from the drum, or winch, was passed through said pulley and into the basement, where it was attached to the section of the tank for the purpose of raising it by the winch.

Campbell testified it was'desired to pull the. tank upward and to tlie north for the purpose of extricating it from the jam into which he stated it had fallen. A number of other witnesses, however, testified the tank had not fallen into any jam and was not in contact with any column; that it was desired only to pull the tank straight upward and that the cable ran from the beam aforesaid straight down to the tank and, therefore, there was only a straight pull upward on the cable. Thus there.was something of a conflict in the evidence in this respect. At ails'- rate, when the cable wa.s attached to the tank,, defendant’s foreman Campbell started the motor power and threw in,-the clutch of the drum and attempted to lift the tank, without success, resulting only in some “jerky” movements. , ■ ,

Thereupon plaintiff and two other men, all employees of defendant Israel, secured a piece of timber four by six inches and twelve to. fourteen feet long and used it as a pry to help lift the tank off the„floor. In order to use the said timber effectively, they placed a piece of. six by six timber near the tank and used it as a “heel” placing the-end of the timber under the tank forming a fulcrum. "When the. pry'was thus set, Campbell applied the power of the truck and began to pull with the winch and cable. By means of the combined power of the pry and the winch, the tank was raised a foot or so.and then fell back, causing the pry to fly upward, the end thereof striking plaintiff in the jaw and under the chin. The cable came down with- the tank, unwinding somewhat and becoming- slack. " -. ■

It is in evidence that the foreman Campbell stood at the hole in the sidewalk at the street level, watching the men place theory under the tank, and when this was done he started, the -power in- an effort to raise the tank. It appears that plaintiff was rendered unconscious by the blow and that his jaw hone was fractured to {.the extent of causing him to lose a number of teeth aud that he was-:-o,t-herwise. injured; The petition is formal and charges^ negligence -as- follows.- .¡‘

“. . . plaintiff states that defendants.carelessly-and-negligently used said apparatus to raise, and move said tank at-said time *241 and tliat the raising o:li said tank by said apparatus was too great strain upon said apparatus and that defendants and each of them kneiv or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known that because thereof, said apparatus might and would weaken and give way while said tank was being raised and. moved as aforesaid, and permit said cable to slacken and slip backward, and cause said tank to fall and injure plaintiff, whom the defendants knew, or by the exercise o P ordinary care would have known, was working as aforesaid, at and near said tank with a piece of timber which he was using as a pry with one end under said tank. Plaintiff states that said apparatus did cause and permit said cable to slip and slacken, said tank to fall, and that the falling of said tank caused said timber or pry to strike plaintiff and injure him as hereinafter set out. Plaintiff states that his injuries herein complained of were caused by the said negligence of defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W. 860, 222 Mo. App. 238, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhomberg-v-israel-moctapp-1927.