Strother v. Kansas City Milling Co.

169 S.W. 43, 261 Mo. 1, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 43 (Strother v. Kansas City Milling Co.) 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
Strother v. Kansas City Milling Co., 169 S.W. 43, 261 Mo. 1, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 238 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

In a case sounding in tort in the Jackson Circuit Court, wherein the damages were laid at $15,000, the jury found for defendant. Thereat, on motion, the court ordered the verdict set aside, granting a new trial on the ground of error in defendant’s given instructions. Thereat defendant, a corporation, appealed from such order. Plaintiff dying pending-appeal, Strother, administrator, is substituted. For convenience we continue to use “plaintiff.”

Defendant owned a flouring mill in Kansas City of a capacity of six hundred barrels daily. In this mill were devices known as bleachers, agitators, and conveyors. operated by belts, pulleys, and shafting and run by steam power. These bleachers, etc., were devices to whiten the flour by the use of a current of air and electricity. One Brown was defendant’s superintendent and in full control and management of the mill and all the men employed therein. About four weeks before the accident, plaintiff, a millwright, was employed by superintendent Brown to make some alterations in or put in some new bleachers. The bleachers or alterations were completed ready for testing, and while to that end plaintiff was assisting Brown in putting on a belt connecting the bleachers with the power he was thrown off a ladder and severely injured by the sudden and unexpected starting of the machinery. His suit for damages is bottomed on those injuries, and there is no question here as to their gravity.

It will not be necessary to set forth even a summary of the petition; for plaintiff’s principal instruction was within its allegations and we reproduce that to show the pleaded grounds of negligence and the theory on which recovery was sought, viz.:

[8]*8“The court instructs the jury that it was the duty of defendant to exercise ordinary care to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to do his work, and to do no act of negligence, as defined by these instructions, which would render such place not reasonably safe for plaintiff to perform the usual and ordinary work required of him by defendant, while engaged in its performance, taking into consideration the kind and character of work to be done and the place in which it was to be done. If, therefore, you shall find and believe from the evidence that on or about the 20th day of August, 1904, plaintiff was in the employ of defendant as millwright, at its mill in Kansas City, Missouri; and if. you shall further find and believe from the evidence that the defendant, at said time and place, had in its employ Patrick Brown as superintendent or head-miller at its said mill, and that said Brown had authority to hire and discharge plaintiff and direct him what to do and how to perform Ms duties in said mill; and if you shall further find and believe from the evidence that on or about the said date plaintiff was ordered and directed by said Brown, in Ms capacity as superintendent or head-miller as aforesaid, to get a ladder and go upon same, and thereby assist said Brown to put a belt upon the pulley mention in evidence; and if you shall further find from the evidence that, in obedience to said order, plaintiff did go upon said ladder, and while standing thereon it became reasonably necessary for plaintiff to occupy a stooping position for the purpose of raising the slack in said belt, and that he did occupy said stooping position on said ladder for the purposes aforesaid at and immediately before the happening of the injury complained of, and if you shall further find and believe from the evidence that while plaintiff was in such stooping position on said ladder for the purpose aforesaid, if you find he was in such position, defendant’s superintendent or head-miller Patrick Brown, without [9]*9warning to plaintiff without plaintiff’s knowledge of his intention so to do, negligently and suddenly threw the belt into position on said pulley to start said belt and pulley revolving; and if you shall further find and believe from the evidence that by reason of such act of suddenly throwing said belt upon said- pulley and starting it to revolving as aforesaid, if you find he did so, the position or place in which plaintiff was working was rendered extra or unusually hazardous and not a reasonably safe place for plaintiff to work, and was not a usual and ordinary danger of such employment; and if you shall further find from the evidence that said Brown knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care on his part could have known, of the position in which plaintiff was situated immediately before and at the time of the putting on of said belt, and of the increased and unusual hazard, if any, of starting said belt and pulley while plaintiff was in such stooping position, if you find he was in such stooping position at said time, and that said Brown, under all the facts shown in evidence could, by the exercise of ordinary care on his part, have warned plaintiff that he was going to put said belt on said pulley in time to have permitted the plaintiff to have let go of said belt, if you find he had hold of the same; hut said Brown failed to do so; and if you shall further find and believe from the evidence that at said time and place plaintiff was in the exercise of such care for his own safety as a reasonably prudent person would exercise under like or similar circumstances, and that as a direct result of said Brown’s thi'owing said belt into position to start said belt and pulley revolving, without any warning to plaintiff, if you find that he did so without any -warning to plaintiff, and that he thereby put the plaintiff in a position of increased and unusual danger or hazard as aforesaid, if any, and that as a direct resxdt thereof plaintiff was thereby thrown from his position on said ladder to the floor of said mill and injured [10]*10thereby, as a direct result thereof, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff.”

Plaintiff introduced evidence tending to prove the facts hypothesized and outlined in that instruction and the averments of his petition. The case will proceed on appeal more understandingly by summarizing the tendency of plaintiff’s proof, viz.: The bleachers, agitators, etc., were in an upper story of the mill. The shaft operating them was close to the ceiling of the story below. This shaft may be called the “upper shaft. ’ ’ On this tipper shaft was a pulley forty inches in diameter and ten inches wide, which, for the purposes of this case, we will call the ‘ ‘ dead pulley. ’ ’ The edges of this pulley were arranged so that the pulley had a rise towards the center, called a crown. In the room below this upper shaft close to the ceiling was another shaft directly connected by gearing and belts to the power. This shaft may be called the “lower shaft. ’ ’ On this lower shaft was a pulley thirty inches in diameter and ten inches wide, which, for the purpose of this case, will be called the “live” or “driving pulley. ’ ’ It revolved at the rate of 280 revolutions per minute. The live pulley was' not directly under the dead one, but to one side so that when the belt connecting the two was on it stood at an angle of, say, forty-five degrees. Holes were made in the floor at the right places above the live pulley through which the endless belt passed. The alterations had been made in the bleaching devices or new ones installed by plaintiff and another millwright, Bennett, and the two had tested the machinery by an old light six-inch belt which was found insufficient. Thereupon, by direction of Brown, the two made a new heavy stiff eight-inch belt of two-ply leather, about seventy-five pounds in weight, and sixty-four feet long.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 43, 261 Mo. 1, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strother-v-kansas-city-milling-co-mo-1914.