Tindall v. Marshall's U. S. Auto Supply Co.

159 S.W.2d 302, 348 Mo. 1189, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 601
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 12, 1941
Docket37678; 37679
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 159 S.W.2d 302 (Tindall v. Marshall's U. S. Auto Supply 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
Tindall v. Marshall's U. S. Auto Supply Co., 159 S.W.2d 302, 348 Mo. 1189, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 601 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

CLARK, J.

Plaintiff brought suit in the Circuit Court of Jackson County against his employer, the Marshall Company, its sales manager, Calkins, and its store manager, Cowan, to recover for injuries alleged to have been caused by carbon monoxide poisoning suffered by plaintiff in his employment. At the close of the evidence plaintiff took an involuntary non-suit as to Calkins. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Cowan, and against the Marshall Company for $10,000. The Marshall Company appealed and plaintiff appealed from the judgment rendered in favor of Cowan. In this court the two appeals have been separately briefed and given separate numbers, 37678 and 37679, but they are both treated in this opinion.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged that he was employed by the Marshall Company in its retail store from some time in July to December *1193 27, 1938, his duties being to install parts and accessories on automobiles; that Cowan was employed by the Marshall Company as its store manager, at all times acting within the scope of his employment, with complete supervision and control over said store and employees, including plaintiff; that plaintiff was required to do his work in the rear room of the store, working from nine to ten hours a day and sometimes on Sunday; that automobiles were constantly being driven in and out of the room where plaintiff worked; that, as a necessary incident to plaintiff’s work, motors were caused and permitted to run thereby emitting poisonous gases, vapors and fumes, in harmful quantities and under harmful conditions, so as to poison the air in plaintiff’s place of work; that such condition existed during the entire time of plaintiff’s employment; that plaintiff inhaled and absorbed such poisonous gases, etc., and as a result thereof “did contract a severe form of occupational disease incident and peculiar to plaintiff’s employment;” that plaintiff’s injury was caused by defendants’ negligence as follows: (a) failure to furnish a safe place to work, in that defendants failed to furnish any reasonably adequate means of ventilation; (b) failure to equip the place of work with blowers and suction fans to carry off the poisonous gases, etc.; (c-d) failure to warn plaintiff; (e) that they assured plaintiff that the gases were harmless; (f) that they ordered plaintiff to close the ventilators and doors and to work with them closed; (g) that they failed to have plaintiff examined by a licensed physician. The petition sets out the injuries which plaintiff claims to have received and prays judgment for $25,000.

The Marshall Company first filed a general demurrer which was overruled. Then it filed an answer, containing a general denial, a plea which it designated as assumption of risk, and a further plea that it was at all times operating under the Missouri Workmen’s Compensation Act and that, if plaintiff was injured in the manner alleged, the same was governed by that Act and the circuit court was without jurisdiction.

Defendant Cowan filed a general denial.

In our view, the appeal of the Marshall Company will be determined by the answer to one question: do the pleadings and proof bring this ease under the provisions of our Workmen’s Compensation Act?

The proof shows that the Marshall Company did riot accept the occupational disease provision of that Act, but did accept its other provisions. Plaintiff, not having rejected the Act, is held to have accepted it. Therefore, if plaintiff’s injuries were due to an accident, or series of accidents, rather than to an occupational disease, the primary exclusive jurisdiction would be in the Compensation Commission and not in the circuit court.

Plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that he was in good *1194 health, when he commenced to work for defendant; that his working place was a room about fifty by sixty feet with a twelve foot ceiling; that there was a door opening into the sales department, and two large doors, one opening into a street and the other into an alley on the opposite side of the room, to permit entrance and exit for automobiles; near the ceiling in one wall were two ventilator openings about ten inches square and three similar openings in the opposite wall; there were no suction or blower fans; in the summer these doors were usually kept open; when the weather began to get cooler, plaintiff testified that Cowan instructed him to close the ventilator openings, which he did and also to keep the large doors closed to prevent the passage of cold air into the sales department; however, plaintiff said that he was free to open the large doors and did open them when he wanted to, but they could be kept open for short intervals only during the cold weather; that running motors constantly emitted gases in the room. Plaintiff further testified that, beginning about October first, he would become weak and dizzy and have headaches while at work and that these conditions gradually increased in frequency and severity; that on December 27, a very cold day, he became so ill that he was compelled to quit work; that he started to his living rooms which were on the floor above his working place; that when he reached the top of the stairs he became unconscious and was taken to a hospital where his illness was diagnosed as carbon monoxide poison.

Plaintiff filed a claim under the Compensation Act, and after receiving several payments, voluntarily withdrew the claim and brought suit.

There was abundant evidence that carbon monoxide gas is generated by the operation of. automobiles and that such gas is common in garages. There was substantial, though disputed, evidence that plaintiff’s injuries were due to the inhalation of such gas, but the evidence in this case fails to establish that plaintiff’s injuries constitute an occupational disease. On this point two physicians testified for the plaintiff and two for the defendant.

Dr. Klepinger, for the plaintiff, testified that he first examined plaintiff in February, 1939, and many times afterward. From such examinations and from the history of plaintiff’s ailment, recited in hypothetical questions, he gave his opinion that plaintiff was suffering from carbon monoxide poison. Plaintiff attempted, and claims to have succeeded, in proving by this witness that plaintiff’s injuries were due to the inhalation of gas from day to day over a period of time rather than to one exposure on December 27. That portion of his testimony is as follows:

“Q. Assuming that Mr. Tindall when he first began to suffer headaches while working for this defendant concern, they were slight in character, and as days went on .and as he continued to work and as he did more work installing heaters, the headaches became more fre *1195 quent with greater severity, and they began-to occur earlier in the morning, what is your opinion as to whether or not those exposures from day to day, with the result that I have outlined, which you are to assume as true, have to do with the ultimate exposure on the 27th resulting in unconsciousness?”

Defendant’s attorney objected to the question because it did not assume all the facts, to-wit: “It does not assume the fact which your honor incorporated in his question that when he got out into the air his headaches and condition cleared up and he went back to normal. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W.2d 302, 348 Mo. 1189, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tindall-v-marshalls-u-s-auto-supply-co-mo-1941.