State Ex Rel. Duvall v. Ellison

223 S.W. 651, 283 Mo. 532, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 651 (State Ex Rel. Duvall v. Ellison) 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. Duvall v. Ellison, 223 S.W. 651, 283 Mo. 532, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 261 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

WALKER, C. J.

Certiorari to the Kansas City Court of Appeals to quash its record in Gibbs v. Duvall, 201 S. W. 605, alleged to contravene our ruling in McIntyre v. Tebbetts, 257 Mo. 117. In the original case the plaintiff, Lydia Gibbs, a widow, sued the defendant Duvall for the loss of services of her minor son and for expenses incident thereto on account of personal injuries inflicted upon him through the alleged negligence of the defendant. At the close of plaintiff’s direct presentation of the case the trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence. Upon an appeal, to the Kansas City Court of Appeals the lower court’s ruling was reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.

The facts as found by the Court of Appeals are that Duvall, the defendant in the original suit, owned a large tract of land near the town of Butler. Twelve or more laborers had been employed by him to remove stumps from the land with which much of it was covered. Plaintiff Gibbs’s son, a boy 16 years of age, was one of these employees. . The work was in charge of a general manager named Howard. The manner of the removal of the stumps was by boring auger holes in them, placing in each a stick of dynamite, in which was inserted a detonating-cap attached, to a fuse. By igniting the latter the dynamite was exploded and the stump blown out of the ground. The plaintiff’s son had been employed in this work for several weeks before the accident which resulted in his injury. One Bert Blough, who, in the absence of Howard, directed the work, told the Gibbs boy early on the morning of December 20th, to go down to the stump patch and get his auger, warm it up and go to work. In obedience to the order the boy went to the field where he and the men had been removing stumps the day before and got his auger. The weather was cold, below freezing, and it was necessary to warm the augers to prevent them from breaking-before commencing work. Some of the men had pre *537 ceded the boy to tbe field and had built a fire. He took bis auger there to warm it. A few moments after be began to warm tbe auger, some boxes of dynamite and fuse and caps were brought and placed near tbe fire. All of tbe employees present were told by Blough to bring their augers to tbe fire and warm them. They obeyed. Blough, who can be said to bave ordered tbe dynamite brought to tbe place where tbe boy was warming bis auger, then sat down upon an unopened case of dynamite and, directing one of the men to cut tbe fuse into four-foot lengths, began tbe work of priming each fuse with a cap and inserting tbe fuses thus capped into tbe sticks of dynamite taken from the open cases near by. Tbe work thus being done. was in dangerous ' proximity to a quantity of fuse and dynamite and was bear tbe fire where tbe men were,warming tbe augers. "When a fuse bad been capped and attached to a stick Blough laid it on tbe ground at bis side. Although there was a supply of caps at bis feet, as a further demonstration of Blough’s general supervision be sent one of tbe bands for an additional supply. It was not yet daylight and the only light Blough bad for tbe priming operation was that from tbe fire and perhaps a lantern which he seems to bave bad.

Tbe caps were like tbe old percussion caps formerly used upon muzzle-loading guns, except that they were of tbe diameter of an ordinary lead, pencil and were about an inch and a half in length. Tbe closed end, like the old percussion caps, bad therein a small quantity of a high explosive which, when set off by tbe burning of tbe fuse, exploded the stick of dynamite into which.the cap end of tbe fuse bad been inserted. Tbe cap was fastened to tbe fuse by slipping it over the same, or putting tbe end of tbe fuse inside of tbe cap and against the closed end, and then with a pair of pliers crimping or compressing tbe open end of tbe cap to the fuse so as to bold it in place. To avoid accident it was necessary that care be exercised to crimp tbe cap as close as possible to its open end, or to apply tbe pressure as far away from tbe detonating end as possible. An ex *538 pert testified that this process of priming and fusing dynamite was the most dangerous part of the Avork connected with its use; and in putting these caps on the fuses, the proper, reasonable and safe method was to do so at a distance from the dynamite, since if a cap exploded it would not only set off a quantity of other caps, but also the dynamite. "While Blough was thus employed the plaintiff’s son, in company with four of the men, were standing about the fire warming their augers preparatory to going to work. Blough, while engaged as stated and only a few feet away from the fire, was talking to the man standing at his side. While thus occupied he crimped a cap Avith his steel pliers and there was a blinding flash and a tremendous explosion which killed Blough, his companion and three of the men who were warming their augers. One of plaintiff’s son’s legs was blown off, blood issued from his mouth and ears, and he received other serious injuries.

The foregoing embodies the material facts as disclosed in the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Much of it is in its nature historical and it is relevant only so far as it tends to throAV light upon the court’s conclusion as to the status of Blough and the consequent liability of the defendant Duvall and hence the right of the relator to this writ.

A comparison and contrast of the facts in McIntyre v. Tebbetts, supra, with those in the case at bar, are necessary to a determination of the matter at issue. In the McIntyre-Tebbetts case one Kuhr, the driver of a wagon used by a manufacturing company in hauling freight from its factory to railway stations for shipment, was authorized to employ and did employ the men 'needed to load and unload the wagons thus used by his employer. He had control of the men while thus employed and furnished them with statements as to their hours of labor upon which their compensation for same was estimated and' paid. On the day of the accident he hired the plaintiff to assist in loading and unloading the wagon which he, Kuhr, was driving. After *539 it was loaded and they were en route to the railway station, Knhr driving and the plaintiff McIntyre riding on the load, the former directed the latter to return an iron bar which they had inadvertently taken with them and deliver it to the shipping clerk at the office of their employer, and that he, Knhr, would wait until the plaintiff’s return. When the latter returned he attempted to climb upon the wagon where he-had previously been riding and was expected to ride, and just as he placed his foot upon the hub of one of the front wheels Kuhr started the team suddenly and plaintiff was thrown to the ground and injured. In a suit brought by him against Tebbetts, the employer, to recover damages for the injuries thus inflicted, there was a judgment in the circuit court in plaintiff’s favor, which- upon an appeal to this court was reversed, a majority of the court holding that while Kuhr was the vice-principal of the' defendant in the hiring of the plaintiff and in controlling his work while loading and unloading the wagon, at the immediate time of the accident Kuhr, as a driver of the wagon, was the fellow-servant of the plaintiff and that the latter was not entitled to recover. Three members of the court thought otherwise and their reasons therefor will be found in their dissenting opinion. A repetition of same is not necessary here. Conceding, as we must, although the

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 651, 283 Mo. 532, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-duvall-v-ellison-mo-1920.