Spears v. SGHANTZ

246 S.W.2d 399, 241 Mo. App. 879, 1952 Mo. App. LEXIS 215
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1952
Docket6964
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 246 S.W.2d 399 (Spears v. SGHANTZ) 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
Spears v. SGHANTZ, 246 S.W.2d 399, 241 Mo. App. 879, 1952 Mo. App. LEXIS 215 (Mo. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

*888 McDOWELL, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained in the operation of a tractor while engaged in the making of a shareerop by plaintiff on lands of defendants in Stoddard County, Missouri. The suit was filed April 13, 1949, in the Circuit Court of Stoddard County, transferred, on change of venue, to Scott County, Missouri, where it was tried before a jury, resulting in a verdict against defendant, George Schantz, on the petition for $3,000.00, and a verdict for $275.00 in favor of defendant, George Schantz, .on defendant’s counterclaim. From the judgment on this verdict, defendant, George Schantz, appealed.

*889 The petition is grounded upon acts of primary negligence on the part of defendant, George Schantz, as follows:

“ (a) In wrongfully and negligently failing to provide a reasonably safe place for the plaintiff to work as the servant of the defendants.

“(b) In wrongfully and negligently failing to provide reasonably safe tools.and machinery with which plaintiff should perform his duties as the servant of the defendant.

“(c) In wrongfully and negligently permitting the aforesaid tractor to be operated with the cover and housing and shield removed from the aforesaid pulley shaft and cotter pin.

“(d) In wrongfully and negligently pla.cing and leaving the aforesaid gear mechanism in an “in gear” position while said housing and cover and shield was removed from the aforesaid pulley shaft and cotter pin.

“ (e) In wrongfully and negligently ordering the plaintiff to start the motor of said tractor, while the aforesaid cover, shield, and housing was removed, and while said gear mechanism was in an “in gear” position.

“(f) In wrongfully and negligently failing and refusing to warn the plaintiff of the “in gear” position of the said gear mechanism, and of the fact that the cover, housing and shield was removed from the said pulley shaft and cotter pin. ’ ’

The court directed a verdict for defendant, Bertha Schantz, and, since there was no appeal from the action of the court in this matter, we will not set out the pleadings as to her.

Defendant, George Schantz, filed an answer and counterclaim. In the answer it was admitted that defendant was owner of the land in question and was the sole owner of the Massey-Harris tractor and that said tractor was equipped with a pulley shaft which revolved while a certain mechanism was in gear position and the tractor motor running. The answer admitted that the pulley shaft was so constructed that in the end of the shaft a cotter pin protruded and revolved when the pulley shaft revolved. It admitted, on the day of the injury, May, 1948, while plaintiff was working on said tractor, that the pulley was not on the pulley shaft and that the cotter pin was, at the time, in the end of said shaft and there was no guard or protection over said shaft. The answer admitted that plaintiff, at the time of the injury, proceeded to start the motor of the tractor while the gear mechanism was in an “in gear” position and that the shaft and cotter pin commenced to revolve when the motor was started.

The answer denied all of the other allegations in plaintiff’s petition. The answer then stated that during the year 1948, and for three years prior thereto plaintiff lived in the house located on defendant’s land where said sharecrop was being made; that, prior to 1948, plaintiff paid rent for the use of said house and did mechanical work in different garages; that plaintiff was a skilled mechanic and was experienced in *890 farming. The answer then pleaded that in March, 1948, this defendant and plaintiff entered into a sharecrop agreement whereby plaintiff agreed to plant approximately 20 acres of land belonging to defendant and wife to cotton and plaintiff was to perform all labor in connection with the planting, cultivating and harvesting of said cotton and was to receive one-half the proceeds therefrom; that defendant was to furnish the seed, tractor and equipment used in the planting and cultivating of said cotton; that the tractor furnished plaintiff was one kept on the farm during the time plaintiff lived in defendant’s house; that plaintiff was familiar with the tractor and the use and operation thereof; that he had used the tractor prior to the accident in question; that several days before the accident plaintiff and defendant had removed the pulley from the pulley shaft and attached cultivator gangs to said tractor and that, at that time, plaintiff saw and knew that the pulley was not on the shaft and the guard covering the same was not thereon. The answer pleads that after the cultivator gangs were attached to the tractor plaintiff used it in bedding up the entire 20 acres of land he was to sharecrop, and then removed the cultivator gangs and attached a team planter to the tractor and used the same for placing fertilizer in the ground; that after the fertilizer was used plaintiff removed the fertilizer attachment and started to plant cotton with the planter attached to the tractor; that while the tractor was stopped and the gear mechanism was in an “in gear’’ position, plaintiff, of his own volition and without instruction from defendant, stood on the right hand side of the tractor in such a position that his clothing came in contact with the pulley shaft when he pressed the starter of the tractor causing the pulley shaft and cotter pin to revolve and from this plaintiff sustained his injuries. The answer then pleads that plaintiff could have as easily started the tractor from the left side or the rear thereof without coming in contact with the pulley shaft and would have avoided his injury. The answer pleads that plaintiff knew, at the time, that the tractor could be started from the left or rear thereof and that he knew or by the use of ordinary care could have seen and known that there was no guard on said pulley shaft and that said pulley shaft was running when the gear mechanism was in position. The answer pleads that plaintiff, by the use of ordinary care, could have seen and known that the gear mechanism was in an “in gear’’ position.

The answer then pleads that whatever injury plaintiff sustained was due to his own negligence which directly caused or contributed to his injury; that whatever injuries plaintiff sustained were caused by the risks which he assumed in using the tractor.

It is unnecessary to state the counterclaim as there is no contention about the finding of the jury on this matter.

To avoid confusion, we will hereafter refer to respondent as plaintiff *891 and to appellant as defendant, which, position they occupied in the lower court.

Defendant, under points and authorities, states 18 separate assignments of error. Because of the length of each assignment of error, we will take them up in order in this opinion.

A brief statement of facts is necessary in the decision of the issues involved.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W.2d 399, 241 Mo. App. 879, 1952 Mo. App. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spears-v-sghantz-moctapp-1952.