Schumacher v. Kansas City Breweries Co.

152 S.W. 13, 247 Mo. 141, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 24, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 13 (Schumacher v. Kansas City Breweries 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
Schumacher v. Kansas City Breweries Co., 152 S.W. 13, 247 Mo. 141, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 55 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

The plaintiff instituted this suit in the circuit-court of Jackson county, against the defendant, to recover twenty-five thousand dollars damages for personal injuries received February 14, 1908, through the alleged negligence of the defendant.

The petition was in the usual form; and the answer consisted of a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and that whatever injuries the plaintiff sustained were the re-[148]*148suit of the negligence of a fellow-servant. The reply was a general denial.

A trial was had before the court and jury, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of twelve thousand and five hundred dollars.

In due time, a motion for a new trial was filed, which was by the court sustained, for the reasons assigned of record, “that plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence that he ought not to recover; that the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrer at the close of plaintiff’s ease, and giving plaintiff’s general instruction number one, and for the reason that plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence that he ought not to recover.” Prom this order sustaining.the motion for a new trial the plaintiff duly appealed the cause to this court.

The defendant introduced no evidence; and the plaintiff’s evidence, outside of the physician’s, consisted of his own testimony and that of four or five-witnesses, employees of defendant.

The facts of the case are but few, and are practically undisputed; but there is a wide variance between counsel as to the legal conclusions which should be drawn therefrom.

The appellant was an employee of respondent, and worked in what is known as the ‘ cook house ’ ’ or the “brew house;” that is, in the room where the ket■tles in .which the beer is cooked are situated, and his duty was to look after the kettles, keep them clean, mix the materials which were cooked therein and attend them while the cooking was going on, etc.

The entire plant of appellant covered nine acres of ground, and consisted of many separate departments; among others were the bottling shop and racking room, where bottles and kegs were stored, washed and filled with beer; the elevator building, where the grain was received and stored; the engine room, the •refrigerating plant, the stock houses and stock cel[149]*149lars, where the beer is stored; barns for horses and wagons; and office buildings, and many others, according to the plat introduced in evidence. But those mentioned are the only ones which the evidence shows were under the charge and control of separate foremen, and who had the authority to employ and discharge .all persons employed in their respective departments.

The entire plant was under the general control of a general manager; and the respondent also had a general superintendent, Mr. Kridler, known as the '‘brew master,” who had general supervision of all the departments of the plant, and, as before stated, the departments mentioned had a special or operating foreman.

Mr. Kridler, the general superintendent, was also the brew master, and had charge of the brew house, where the beer was manufactured and where appellant worked. There were employed in this department about twenty-five men, and about one hundred and fifty in the entire plant. Mr. Kridler , employed and discharged those working in the brew house, and had the authority, as I understand the record, to discharge men from practically all of the different departments.

One Martiny was the. foreman, or as he testified, the “wharf foreman,” of the place where the grain was stored, but it seems that he was an all-round kind of a man, and was at times assigned by Kridler to do various kinds of work, as the occasion might arise, in other departments. At the time of the injury complained of, Martiny had been assigned to the storeroom, or cellar No. 1, which was on the second floor of the building, along side of which respondent was injured, to tear out the partitions, floors and joists, with the view of replacing the floor with concrete. Martiny was placed in charge of this work, and he went out and hired three or four men to assist him in doing that work, he acting as foreman.

[150]*150They began the work on February 3, 1908, and completed it on. March 24, thereafter.

The appellant was injured in a passageway,, about fourteen or fifteen feet wide, between said stock house on the west, and the building* in which were the engine and boiler rooms on the north and the brew house on the south, the latter building* being on the east side-of the passageway. Near the center of this, passage there was located a railroad track, running-north and south, but at the time it was but little used. This passage continued on south a. considerable distance, between the malt house on the one side and the elevator building on the other.

This passageway was in common and general use by the employees of respondent, in going to and in returning from their work, there being a door opening from the brew house, where appellant worked, into this passageway. Whenever cars stood upon this track,, which was about once a week, the employees did not use this passageway in going to and returning from their work. There were two or three other ways by which the employees could go to their work, but the one previously mentioned was the most direct and convenient route for those to go who lived north of the plant, one of whom was the appellant.

The appellant was injured by being struck with a heavy piece of timber about sixteen feet in length, and six by twelve inches in thickness, thrown from a window in the second story of the stock house, some sixteen or seventeen feet above the ground. This window was on the west side of the passageway, and about thirty-five or forty feet south of the north end thereof, the point where the appellant entered it.

As before stated, the appellant was injured on the 14th day of February, 1908, eleven days after respondent began tearing out the partitions and floors previously mentioned. The first materials removed from the building were light stuffs taken from the par[151]*151titions and floors. This stuff was taken to the window and thrown out without ceremony, if the passageway was clear; but when they began moving the heavy timbers, some time before the accident, the exact time not shown, a watchman was stationed at or near the north end of the passageway, to warn the parties-who were throwing the timbers from the window, when the passageway was clear. Under that arrangement, whenever the parties in the building wished to throw or push timbers from the window, one of them would halloo, “Look out below,”' or some such words, whereupon, the watchman below would, if the passageway was clear, answer, “All right,” or some such words. After that was gone through with, the timber would be thrown out, which would take about fifteen or sixteen seconds from the time the people in the house received the answer, “All right.”

This work of throwing out the timber was not continuous. It lasted at times for a few minutes or hours, or perhaps a half of a day; then there would be intervals at times for hours and days. The watchman was stationed at his post of duty only at those times when these timbers were being thrown from the window. The watchman was not always the same person. The foreman, when he got ready to resume the work of throwing out the timbers, would select a watchman and station him at his post.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 13, 247 Mo. 141, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schumacher-v-kansas-city-breweries-co-mo-1912.