State Ex Rel. American Packing Co. v. Reynolds

230 S.W. 642, 287 Mo. 697, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 30, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 642 (State Ex Rel. American Packing Co. v. Reynolds) 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
State Ex Rel. American Packing Co. v. Reynolds, 230 S.W. 642, 287 Mo. 697, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 181 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

ELDER, J.

Certiorari to quash judgment of the St. Louis Court of Appeals.

*702 Statement *701 Relator seeks by writ of certiorari to quash a judgment entered by the St. Louis Court of Appeals affirming a judg *702 ment of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, in a case *n wkich one Jacob Heckfuss was respondent, and the American Packing Company (relator herein, was appellant, reported in 224 S. W. 99, for the alleged reason that said Court of Appeals failed to follow the last previous ruling of this court, as required by the Constitution of this state.

The opinion of the Court of Appeals outlines the petition in the case, and the negligence charged therein, as follows :

“The petition alleges that plaintiff was a laborer in the employ of defendant at its plant and factory in the City of St. Louis; that defendant in operating its business at said plant used a machine consisting of a hopper, cylinder, crusher and knives in making sausage and chopping meat; that this machine was operated by power, transmitted to it by belts and pulleys; that he was ordered and directed by defendant to clean said machine or grinder, and at the time said machine was stopped and not in motion. The negligence of defendant is charged in the following language: ‘ . . . The said machine by reason of the negligence of the defendants was suddenly and without warning or notice to the plaintiff started and caused to revolve, and the wheels and cylinder and crusher and knives thereof to revolve and turn, whereby the plaintiff’s right hand and thumb and fingers thereof were caught in said machine, . . .’ ”

The1 evidentiary facts of the case are thus set out in the opinion:

“Plaintiff was injured while cleaning one of these machines at defendant’s establishment. It appears from the testimony that he had worked in a similar plant a number of years under the same foreman and hoses he was working under at the time he was injured. He had gone to work at the plant where he was injured only a few days before the accident took place. The parties for which he had worked before this had taken over the property of the West End Packing and Provision Company, and the new company was known as the Amer *703 ican Packing Company. Plaintiff had been working at this machine where he was injured only an hour or two before the accident happened. The machine consists of a funnel-shaped hopper, projecting up through the bottom of which are the knives, which cut the meat as they are revolved when attached to a shaft on which are fastened two pulleys. One is a loose pulley, the other a tight pulley. When it is desired to stop the machine the belt, by a very simple appliance, is shifted from the tight pulley to the loose pulley. The machine is then stopped, but as soon as the belt is shifted back to the tight pulley it starts the machine. After plaintiff had cleaned the machine and had started to replace the knives, the machinery started with a sudden jerk and stopped just as suddenly, but not until after plaintiff had received his injuries, which it is unnecessary to describe here, as there is no point made that the verdict is excessive. . . .
“The proof adduced shows that the loose pulley on the shaft, located directly by the side of the tight pulley, was too loose, causing the belt to shift over to and catch on to the tight pulley, suddenly starting the machine. This was shown by the testimony of several witnesses, including defendant’s foreman, who investigated this particular machine, belt and pulleys, and observed the operation of the same immediately after the accident.”

Prior to answering the relator filed a motion to make the petition more definite and certain, which was overruled. It then filed a demurrer, the ground of which was that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This demurrer was likewise overruled. Relator, without having sáved exceptions to either of such rulings, then filed an answer, the same being a general denial, with a plea of contributory negligence. At the beginning of the trial, relator objected to the introduction of any evidence for the reason that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

*704 Relator, in its petition for onr writ, and in its brief, suggests various matters wherein the opinion of the Court of Appeals conflicts with controlling decisions of this court. These, with the particulars pertinent thereto, we- shall treat of in the course of the opinion.

I. Relator contends that the petition did not state-facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in that the allegation of negligence contained in the petition “was intended as one bringing the case-within the doctrine res ipsa loquitur” upon which theory it was essential that the petition should have averred the following facts, or averments from which those facts might be reasonably inferred, to-wit:-

“ (1) That the machine in question was under the sole control of relator; (2) that its plan of construction and method of operation, and especially the cause of its sudden starting, were facts peculiarly within the knowledge and control of relator; (3) that plaintiff possessed neither the knowledge, nor the means of knowledge, of the cause of the sudden starting of the machine on the occasion of his injury; and (4) that there were no witnesses known to him by whom he could prove the cause of the sudden starting of the machine and no other means of proof of that fact within his knowledge;” arid, no such averments appearing in the petition, that the ruling of the Court of Appeals is in conflict with the following controlling decisions of this court, viz: Klebe v. Distilling Co., 207 Mo. 480; Removich v. Construction Co., 264 Mo. 43; Ash v. Printing Co., 199 S. W. 994; Von Trebra v. Gaslight Co., 209 Mo. 648; Chouquette v. Railroad, 152 Mo. 257; Fisher & Co. v. Realty Co., 159 Mo. 562, and Byers v. Investment Co., 219 S. W. 570.

The opinion of the Court of Appeals bearing upon the foregoing contention is as follows:

“One of the principal points relied upon by appellant-for reversal is that the petition attempted to aver facts bringing the case within the rule res ipsa loquitur, but plaintiff proved facts to which that rule cannot be *705 applied to sustain a recovery, and that the petition did not state such facts as to bring the case within the rule. In our view of this case it is unnecessary to decide whether or not, under the allegations in this petition, the rule res ipsa loquitur would apply. Whatever may have been the situation at the time of filing this petition, when this case was submitted to the jury the rule res ipsa loquitur was entirely removed from the case by the proof and by the instructions.”

The case of Klebe v.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 642, 287 Mo. 697, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-american-packing-co-v-reynolds-mo-1921.