Scobey v. Allen Cooperage Co.

236 S.W. 686, 210 Mo. App. 301, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 206
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 236 S.W. 686 (Scobey v. Allen Cooperage 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
Scobey v. Allen Cooperage Co., 236 S.W. 686, 210 Mo. App. 301, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 206 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

BRADLEY, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injury. On trial below before the court and a jury, plaintiff obtained a judgment for $600, and from this judgment defendant appealed.

Plaintiff with one Wilbanks was engaged in cutting stave timber. They had cut a túpelo gum, something like eighteen inches or two feet at the butt, and about a forty foot tapering body. The tree did not clear the stump, which was about two and one-half or three feet high, nor did it fall entirely to the ground, but lodged against three trees in such manner that there was considerable pressure transmitted to the body of the fallen tree. The three trees were up near the top of the fallen tree. Fastened at the stum and held firm near the top, the log of the tree was in a strain, as some of the witnesses expressed it. The tree had fallen so nearly down that *305 it was low enough to saw, and plaintiff and Wilbanks with a six-foot crosscut saw started to saw off a log about twenty feet from the stump. Plaintiff was on the right hand side of the tree and was sawing right handed, his right foot and leg forward and next to the log. At the place where the log was being cut off the tree was a foot or eighteen inches in diameter. Before the saw was buried the log split or burst, and swung or fell towards plaintiff because of the pressure in his direction, and broke his right leg.

Plaintiff alleged that he was inexperienced in cutting timber and that he so informed Wilbanks, who, he alleged, was defendant’s foreman. He also alleges that he informed Wilbanks that he would rely upon him to be on the lookout and warn him of any danger, and that Wilbanks promised and agreed to be on the lookout and to warn him of any danger. Plaintiff further alleges that he suggested to Wilbanks that the tree be removed from the stump before they attempted to cut the same into logs, but that Wilbanks stated that such was not necessary, that they could use wedges to prevent pinching; and relying upon the knowledge and skill of Wilbanks plaintiff alleges that he proceeded and was injured. Plaintiff follows these specific allegations with an allegation that it was defendant’s duty to furnish him a reasonably safe place to work, and that it negligently failed to do so. The answer is a general denial.

Defendant makes two assignments: (1) That its request for a directed verdict should have been given at the close of the whole case; (2) that error was committed in giving instructions for plaintiff.

Plaintiff testified as to his inexperience, and his reliance on Wilbanks as he alleged in his petition. Concerning his employment plaintiff testified: “Well, he (Wilbanks) only met me and asked me where he could get a hand and I told him I wanted to work; I had no job, and he said he would like to hire me to saw — cut timber on Varner River, and I told him I was afraid, I *306 never cnt any timber, and he kept on insisting on me and I told him I would come out and help him if he would look out for the danger, that I was afraid; that I didn’t know danger of the trees, and he said he would.” Speaking of the situation and circumstances immediately preceding his injury plaintiff testified that before they began to saw the log he asked Wilbanks if it was dangerous, and that Wilbanks said: “No, we will follow it (the saw) with a wedge and chop it off underneath with an axe, and it will not be dangerous;” and that before they got the saw buried far enough to put a wedge in, the log-burst and broke his leg. Plaintiff’s case is bottomed upon the allegation that he was inexperienced, and suggested the possible danger from the log in its strained condition, and that Wilbanks stated in effect that, there was no danger, and that relying upon Wilbanks he proceeded and was injured. Plaintiff’s evidence tends to support this allegation. It is not alleged that Wilbanks was negligent in anything- that he said or did, but the facts from plaintiff’s view point are stated, and supported by the evidence, and these facts if true would tend to show negligence. Measured by a demurrer the situation is this: Plaintiff knew nothing about cutting-timber; he so informed Wilbanks, and Wilbanks promised to look out for him. The tree where plaintiff was injured was in a strain and proved to be dangerous. Plaintiff sensed this danger, but was in effect assured by Wilbanks, an experienced timber man, that there was no danger. We cannot say in these circumstances as a matter of law that Wilbanks was wholly free from negligence or that plaintiff was guilty of any negligence that contributed to his injury or that he assumed the risk which he encountered. Neither contributory negligence nor assumption of risk is pleaded, but if either condition existed without question plaintiff could not recover, regardless of the failure to so plead. [Columbia Taxicab Co. v. Roemmich, 208 S. W. (Mo. Ann.) 859; Lumb v. Forney, 190 S. W. (Mo. App.) 988.]

*307 As stated plaintiff did not allege that Wilbanks was negligent in anything that he said or did, except the general allegation that defendant negligently failed to furnish him a reasonably safe place to work. No point, however, is made against the petition. Negligence is not susceptible of direct proof, but is an inference from facts put in evidence. [Hoel v. Land Co., 173 Mo. App. 557, 158 S. W. 694.] In Callahan v. Warne et al., 40 Mo. 131, l. c. 136, it is written: “Negligence is a thing which by its very nature pertains to human conduct, and the action of the mind and will. It is something invisible, intangible, and for the most part incapable of direct proof, like sensible facts, or physical events. It is, in general a matter of inference from other facts and circumstances which admit of direct proof, and which may raise a presumption of the truth of the main fact to be proved. These facts and circumstances must be such as would warrant a jury in inferring from them the fact of negligence, by reasoning in the ordinary way, according to the natural and proper relations of things, and consistently with the common sense and experience of mankind. ’ ’

Measured by the demurrer all of plaintiff’s evidence must be taken as true, as well as every reasonable inference dedueible therefrom, and the evidence on the part of defendant which is contradicted must be considered as excluded. [Holweg v. Bell Telephone Co., 195 Mo. 149, 93 S. W. 262; Link v. Railroad, 233 S. W. (Mo. App.) 834; Forbes v. Dunnovant, 198 Mo. 193, 95 S. W. 934.] Considered in this light plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury on the question of Wilbanks’ negligence.

Defendant contends, however, that if it be found that Wilbanks was negligent in and about the matters and things charged, that still plaintiff cannot recover because Wilbanks was an independent contractor, and that he employed plaintiff, and that defendant is in no wise responsible. Wilbanks testified that he was not the foreman of defendant; that he was not its agent; that he was cutting timber by the thousand feet, and *308 that defendant had nothing to do with his manner of work in the woods. That he furnished his own tools, and that one Harris was woods foreman of defendant, and that Harris employed him to cut by the thousand, and that he, Wilbanks, employed plaintiff and paid plaintiff for the two or three days plaintiff worked; and that defendant had nothing to do with such employment.

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Related

Hoel v. Underwriters Land Co.
158 S.W. 694 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)
Callahan v. Warne
40 Mo. 131 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1867)
Hollweg v. Bell Telephone Co.
93 S.W. 262 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)
Forbes v. Dunnavant
95 S.W. 934 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 686, 210 Mo. App. 301, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scobey-v-allen-cooperage-co-moctapp-1922.