Steube v. Christopher & Simpson Architectural Iron & Foundry Co.

85 Mo. App. 640, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 499
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 85 Mo. App. 640 (Steube v. Christopher & Simpson Architectural Iron & Foundry 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
Steube v. Christopher & Simpson Architectural Iron & Foundry Co., 85 Mo. App. 640, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 499 (Mo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

— The averments' of the petition essential to a recovery are in substance, that plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant corporation as an iron setter, and was assisting in the erection of an iron smoke-stack at the Odeon building (Masonic Temple), in the city of St. Louis, and that one John Miller, while acting for defendant as foreman, and while plaintiff was in the discharge of his duties at the base of a section of said smoke-stack, which was being elevated to its place by means of a derrick, negligently and carelessly permitted and directed that a heavy iron strap be left hanging at the top of said section in such a position that said strap was liable to fall, and did fall upon and strike plaintiff, rendering him unconscious and knocked him from the scaffold upon which he was working to a roof about thirty feet below, breaking his ribs, etc.

[644]*644There were two answers filed. The first admitted specifically that plaintiff was an employee of defendant. The second one specifically denied that plaintiff was in the employ of defendant, and denied all other allegations of the petition.

The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $1,000. The defendant appealed.

I. At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendant offered a demurrer to the evidence, which the court denied. No complaint is made to the giving or the refusal to give other instructions, and no exceptions were saved to the admission or rejection of testimony. The sole contention of appellant is that .there was not sufficient evidence to warrant the submission of the cause to the jury. In this state of the record we are bound to assume that plaintiff’s evidence is true, and laying aside the controverting evidence of defendant, give to that of plaintiff, every favorable inference which may be reasonably and fairly drawn from it. Cohn v. City of Kansas, 108 Mo. 387. Before the verdict of a jury can be set aside by an appellate court it should appear that there is no evidence to support it, or that it is- the result of passion, prejudice, or misconduct of the jury. Mere insufficiency of the evidence in the opinion of the appellate' court is not sufficient. James v. Mutual Reserve Life Ass’n, 148 Mo. l. c. 16; Holladay Klotz Land & Lumber Co. v. Tie Co., 79 Mo. App. 543; Huth v. Dohle, 76 Mo. App. 671; Tower v. Pauley, 76 Mo. App. 287.

II. Outside of the solemn admission of the defendant, by its first answer filed in the cause, that the plaintiff was in its employ at the time he was injured, the preponderance of the evidence on this issue of fact was on the side of the plaintiff.

IH. It was admitted on the trial that defendant contracted with the owners to finish and erect all the struct[645]*645ural iron work for the Odeon building. To overcome the force of this admission it read in evidence a contract whereby it sublet the work, it had contracted to do, to Ered Laun, who had been in its employ for 27 years. Eor the erection of the smoke-stack, defendant first sublet the contract to Stupp Bros. When the defendant was ready to have the smoke-stack put up, it notified Stupp Bros, to do the work. Stupp Bros, were unprepared to proceed with the work, for the reason their erection men were out of the city, and requested the defendant to do the work. Laun, by direction of defendant, called on Stupp Bros, and offered on his own-behalf to erect the stack for $125. Stupp Bros, declined to accept the offer, but offered to pay $100 for its erection. Laun did not accept the offer, but reported to the defendant, who, through its- secretary, telephoned Stupp -Bros, that it would accept the offer of $100 and put up the stack. It appears from Laun’s testimony that defendant, a year or so prior to taking the contract for the Odeon building, had' been boycotted by some of the labor unions, and that on account of this trouble Tie had taken all of its contracts for outside erection work; that on this particular job defendant’s paymaster paid all his men, and that his name was carried on the defendant’s pay-roll the same after the making of the contract as before, and that defendant furnished all the tools and tackle for carrying on the work. Laun superintended the work when present. When, for any cause he was absent, he left instructions and directions with John Miller, one of the workmen, for superintending and carrying on the work. The witnesses speak of Miller as a straw-bossi — a pusher. Miller testified in this connection as follows:

“Q. Now, then, if there was any foreman on that job, you must have been- the foreman? A. Tes, sir; only I call it pusher.”
[646]*646“Q. In other words you gave your instructions how to carry on the work ? A. That’s the pusher’s business.” He further says: “I couldn’t say whether I was a boss' or pusher; I didn’t have the authority; a boss can hire and discharge men, that’s all the authority I didn’t have” (i. e., the authority to hire and discharge). “I told the men what to do. I told the men to raise this beam here and lower that beam over there. I would say: ‘Steube, you and Joe Miller go up to the fourth floor and straighten out this beam, or attach a rope to that Beam.’ I gave the men instructions how to carry on the work. During the absence of Ered Laun, which lasted sometimes for six or eight hours, I had charge to see that the work was going on.” Other workmen testified that Miller was a foreman; that he instructed the men what to do; that he gave orders, and they obeyed them; that he had charge of the work. It was in the absence of Laun and while plaintiff was working at a time and place under a personal order to him from Miller, that he was injured.

In Miller v. Railroad, 109 Mo. l. c. 356, the Supreme Court says, that “where the master gives to a person power to superintend, control and direct the men engaged in the performance of work, such person is, as to the men under him, a vice-principal, and it can make no difference whether he is called superintendent, conductor, boss or foreman.” This case is approvingly cited in the following cases: Foster v. Railroad, 115 Mo. l. c. 180; Berry v. Railroad, 124 Mo. l. c. 249; and in Cord v. Eddy, 129 Mo. l. c. 516. The same rule is announced in Libby v. Scherman, 146 Ill. 540; in Miller v. Railroad, 58 Ark. 66, and in numerous cases found in the reports of many of the states. Whenever the negligent servant can be fairly said to take the place of the master and to represent him, he becomes the vice-principal, and the master should be held liable for his negligences. Wood on Master [647]*647& Servant (2 Ed.), secs. 436, 438; Grattis v. Railroad Co., 153 Mo. 380; Colorado, etc., R. R. Co. v. Napton, 17 Cal. 501; Chicago, etc., R. R. Co. v. Kneisin, 152 Ills. 458; Promer v. Railroad, 90 Wis. 215; Railroad v. Spencer, 93 Tenn. 173. Erom the nature of the work in which the men were engaged, being ordered from place to place on the work and to do different work and from its hazardous nature, it was the duty of the master to superintend it. His obligation to superintend the work was such that he could not shift it by delegating the oversight of the workmen and the work to an employee, who in all other respects would be a fellow servant. Dutzi v. Geisel, 23 Mo. App. 676; Taylor v. Railroad, 121 Ind. 121. In every view of the situation as disclosed by the evidence, John Miller was a vice-principal and the defendant is responsible for any injury incurred through his negligence while superintending and directing the work.

IV. The plaintiff was injured while he was at work on the smoke-stack.

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Bluebook (online)
85 Mo. App. 640, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steube-v-christopher-simpson-architectural-iron-foundry-co-moctapp-1900.