Strobel v. Gerst Bros. Manufacturing Co.

127 S.W. 421, 148 Mo. App. 22, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 593
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 127 S.W. 421 (Strobel v. Gerst Bros. Manufacturing 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
Strobel v. Gerst Bros. Manufacturing Co., 127 S.W. 421, 148 Mo. App. 22, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 593 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

Action by plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries sustained while in the employ of the defendant, the latter being engaged in the manufacture of architectural iron, carrying on that business in the city of St. Louis, plaintiff at the time of the accident being engaged as a moulder in the establishment. He was at work on the 15th of August, 1907, until about 5 o’clock in the afternoon of that day and in passing from the room in which he was at work, slipped upon some scrap iron lying on the floor of the room through which he was passing and fell, breaking his knee. The petition contains the usual averments of the incorporation of the defendant, the employment of the plaintiff, the duty of the employer to provide a reasonably safe place wherein the employees were required to work and to provide a reasonably safe access to and egress from the place at which they were required to [26]*26work and that on account of the failure of the defendant company to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe passageway or egress from the premises, plaintiff, while leaving the premises of the defendant, sustained the injuries of which he complains. Setting out his expense incurred and suffering sustained, he claims $20,000 damages.

The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The reply was a general denial.

As the defendant, at the close of plaintiff’s testimony and at the close of the testimony in the case, interposed demurrers challenging the presence of any testimony entitling plaintiff to recover, we have examined into it as far as necessary to determine this. As the statement of the respondent is rather more condensed than that of appellant, we follow it substantially in our statement of the facts. Defendant was conducting an iron foundry, engaged principally in manufacturing what is known as architectural iron. The premises consisted of a large building, somewhat longer from east to west than across the north and south. A long partition pierced with two openings run east and west the entire length of the building, the partitioning of the building so arranged as to form a long room on the south side. The eastern end of this room was known as the molding shop and there plaintiff worked. Along the floor of the molding shop were various piles of sand, separated by passageways to allow the molders to move from one point to another. These piles of sand were used in molding the iron, and each pile was technically known as a “floor.”’ At the western end of the molding shop was what is known as the “beam shop” or “structural shop,” but it was part of the large molding room proper. Immediately north of this beam shop was a large room known as the “dog house.” East of this and occupying the whole northeast corner of the building was a room used partly as a blacksmith shop and partly as a “finish shop.” No partition separated these two [27]*27divisions. An opening about fifteen or twenty feet wide led from the western part of tbe molding room north into the “dog house,” and another opening of about the same Avidth led from the eastern portion of the molding shop north from the blacksmith and finish shop and an opening led east from the “dog house” from the blacksmith and finish shop. There Avere two doors in the premises opening out upon the street, both were in the blacksmith and finish shop. One of them was on the north side near the middle of the room and opened out on Cass avenue, the other was on the east side and opened out upon Eighth street. There was another door at the east end of the molding room opening into Eighth street but it is not in evidence that this door was ever opened or used by the employees. The testimony on the part of plaintiff is that it was closed and not used by the employees. When the time came for a workman in the molding room to quit his work, he necessarily Avent into the room known as the blacksmith and finish room in order to leave the premises. Another reason for this was that the time clock was located in this finish room upon which all employees were required, under penalty of a fine for failure to do so, to register their hour of leaving. In the blacksmith or finish shop there Avas a forge, a drill press, an anvil and various work tables and benches scattered around. Plaintiff was working here and at 5 o’clock on the 19th of August, 1907, quitting his labor, walked from the molding room north, through the opening leading from the molding room directly into the blacksmith and finish shop. Going to the time clock he walked through a passageway running north and south between some trestles for supporting heavy work and a workbench. It was in this passageway, and while going through it, that he fell, fracturing the femur bone just above or in the right knee joint. When plaintiff started out and got into the blacksmith or finish shop, the passageway on the east side of the room was blocked so that there was no passage [28]*28that way. It had always been impossible to go through this eastern passageway. He did not go around through the “dog house” and enter the blacksmith and finish shop that way as there had been “a heat” that day and the passageway through the “dog house” was obstructed with caldrons for melting metal, ladles, flasks, snap boxes, sand piles and crane, and in going out that way there Avere obstructions of all kinds, such as of cornice iron, nor was it possible to get to the time clock by going that Avay, as it was blocked off AArith freshly painted cornices. The evidence, therefore, tended to show that the way that the plaintiff took was practically the only way to get out; he possibly had to do that to register on the clock. The other workmen passed through the same Avay and the rule and custom was to go straight through the shop. The passageway that the plaintiff used on this occasion Avas the regular passway used by all the employees; it Avas two or three feet wide, was piled up with iron, the piles being 8 or 10 inches high and several feet long and extended under the trestles of the table. At the time he fell this stuff was lying there as it had always done; it was piled up in this way with scrap iron and rubbish. The witnesses did not remember that the room used as an exit had ever been cleaned, but the workmen walked over it every night. Some round and flat iron had been received the morning of the accident from the iron store and had been thrown down betAveen the trestles and the work table and this was directly in the passageway that plaintiff, took and was somewhere about the point where he fell. The secretary and general manager of the defendant was in the same room when plaintiff fell and had been around the shop that day. Upon seeing that the other ways were blocked, plaintiff thought that it was safe to attempt the regular passageway. He saw the pile of iron and while walking carefully over it both his feet slipped out from under him and his knee struck against some iron. This is practically the evidence on the part of plaintiff, or to [29]*29put it more favorably to defendant, there is evidence in the case tending to show the above facts.

On the part of defendant there was evidence tending to contradict the greater part of this, in that it tended to show that plaintiff could have gone out safely by using another exit, that he knew the condition of the premises and hence had assumed the risk attendant upon going through a passageway that he knew was obstructed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.W. 421, 148 Mo. App. 22, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strobel-v-gerst-bros-manufacturing-co-moctapp-1910.