State Ex Rel. Schlueter Manufacturing Co. v. Beck

85 S.W.2d 1026, 337 Mo. 839, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 4, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 85 S.W.2d 1026 (State Ex Rel. Schlueter Manufacturing Co. v. Beck) 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. Schlueter Manufacturing Co. v. Beck, 85 S.W.2d 1026, 337 Mo. 839, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 423 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

*843 ELLISON, J.

Original proceeding in prohibition. .Charles E. Slater, as plaintiff, sued the relator herein, the Schlueter Manufacturing Compand, as defendant, in the Circuit Court of St. Louis for damages, alleging that through the negligence of the latter he had contracted an occupational disease while employed as a paint sprayer in its paint shop in St. Louis. By means of a spray gun he sprayed bronze, aluminum, lac-enamel, lacquer enamel, and zinc paints. In his petition he charged that as a result of inhaling the fumes or spray from these painting materials, or in some way by coming in contact with them (the petition in the damage suit is not in this record) he developed the disease aforesaid.

While the case was pending in Division One of the Circuit Court of St. Louis before the respondent, the Honorale Clyde C. Beck, judge thereof, the plaintiff filed an application for an order to photograph and inspect the premises of the relator and to take samples of the foregoing painting materials for chemical analysis. The circuit court entered an order granting this application in part. The relator thereupon filed his petition in prohibition in this court praying that Judge Beck be prohibited and restrained from executing and enforcing, or in any wise carrying into effect, said order. This court issued its provisional rule in prohibition and the respondent *844 judge filed a demurrer and motion to quash.. The issues here thus become questions of law. -, ,

The application of the plaintiff Slater below' for, the order to inspect and take samples was as follows:' •

“Comes now plaintiff and prays that the Court order defendant to permit plaintiff to inspect the factory, premises, spray booths, machinery and plant of the defendant at 4616 N. Broadway, in the City of St. Louis, Missouri, and for the purpose of so doing, to permit a chemist to obtain samples- of bronze, aluminum, lac-enamel, lacquer enamel, red stripping paint, zinc and their respective thinners, and a photographer to accompany plaintiff or his attorney - on said inspection, and as grounds for this motion plaintiff states that his injuries, for which this suit is brought, were sustained while plaintiff was employed by defendant as a paint sprayer, spraying the above-mentioned paints, aluminums, lac-enamels, etc., by means of an air-pressure spray gun, in that by reason of the nature of the. work and surroundings there, plaintiff was caused to be injured; and sustaining an occupational disease; that plaintiff desires to inspect the said premises for the purpose of'ascertaining the condition there; and to obtain samples of bronze, aluminum, lac-enamel-, red stripping paint, lacquer and enamel and zinc, and their respective thinners; that without such inspection and samples plaintiff cannot safely proceed to trial; that the said inspection is necessary and indispensable for the further prosecution of the said lawsuit, and the plaintiff’s attorneys are not acquainted with the technical nature of the said work, nor with the appliances, paints, bronze, aluminum, lac-enamels, lacquer enamels, red stripping paint, zinc and their respective thinners, and their chemical constituents and solvents or paraphernalia located on said premises and are unable to proceed to trial without such knowledge.

“Wherefore, plaintiff, prays that the Court order defendant to permit plaintiff within a specified time to make an inspection as aforesaid, sufficiently before trial of the said case, to enable plaintiff to properly prepare the same.”

The order made by the respondent judge, assailed in this proceeding, is as follows:

“The Court having heard and duly considered the plaintiff’s application and supplemental application for leave to inspect the premises of the defendant corporation and to obtain samples and specimens of paints, etc., heretofore filed and submitted herein, and being sufficiently advised of and concerning the premises doth order that said application be granted in part as prayed, and the Court doth order that the plaintiff and his attorney, together with one chemist and one photographer, be and they are hereby authorized to enter the premises of the defendant corporation at 4616 North Broadway, in the- City of St. Louis, State of Missouri, to inspect the premises, *845 spray booths and machinery of said defendant corporation, only at said places where plaintiff was working during his employment by the defendant, to-wit: the paint shop on the 4th floor of the defendant’s said plant.

“It is further ordered by the Court that plaintiff and said chemist be permitted to make an inspection of samples not to exceed three ounces each in quantity of the following, to-wit: bronze, aluminum, lac-enamel, lacquer enamel, red stripping paint, zinc and their respective thinners, in order to enable said chemist to determine the chemical constituents thereof; said analysis of said samples to be made on the premises of the defendant corporation, or if said analysis be made elsewhere, then the same shall be made only with the consent of the defendant corporation, and a representative of the defendant shall be permitted to be present at such time.

“It is further ordered by the Court that the plaintiff and the photographer be permitted to take photographs of the premises of the defendant corporation only at said places where plaintiff was working during his employment by the defendant, to-wit: the paint shop in the 4th floor of the defendant’s said plant.

“And it is further ordered by the Court that the defendant permit plaintiff, his attorney, chemist and photographer to enter the premises of the defendant corporation to make said inspection and examination, and that the defendant be permitted to have its representative present at all times during said inspection.

“And it is further ordered by the Court that said inspection be made on the 7th day of February, 1935, at 11 o’clock a. m.”

The relator maintains that the foregoing order is and was beyond the lawful jurisdiction of the respondent judge:

(1) because the circuit courts of this State have no statutory, common-law or inherent power to make orders of that character;

(2) because the order violates Sections 11 and 30, Article II, Constitution of Missouri, and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States in that it attempts to authorize an unreasonable search of the relator’s premises which would disclose its entire process of manufacture in its paint shop; and also attempts to allow a seizure and destruction of its property by permitting the plaintiff to take three-ounce samples of each of its enumerated painting materials;

(3) because the plaintiff’s petition in the damage suit below discloses that a period of approximately four years had intervened between the termination of his employment and the institution of his damage suit; and the application for the court order did not allege that the conditions prevailing and the processes and materials used in the rélator’s paint shop when the plaintiff worked there were the same as now; in consequence of which evidence as to these present facts would be immaterial;

*846

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W.2d 1026, 337 Mo. 839, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-schlueter-manufacturing-co-v-beck-mo-1935.