Unrein v. Oklahoma Hide Co.

244 S.W. 924, 295 Mo. 353, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 9, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 924 (Unrein v. Oklahoma Hide 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
Unrein v. Oklahoma Hide Co., 244 S.W. 924, 295 Mo. 353, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 120 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*363 death of the husband of plaintiff (respondent here), caused by alleged negligence, of defendant. Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $8,000. After unsuccessful motions for a new trial and in arrest, defendant appeals.

Since appellant’s main contention is that the trial court erred in not sustaining its demurrer at the close of all the evidence, a rather full statement of the facts must be made. Defendant was engaged at Kansas City in the business of buying and selling hides at wholesale, and plaintiff’s husband was in its employ as a laborer. The injury which resulted in the death of deceased occurred at the warehouse of said company on October 15, 1918. Defendant’s warehouse was a brick building con *364 sisting of a .main floor and basement, approximately 100 or 125 long by fifty feet wide. A freight elevator about the middle of tbe building along the east wall and about five by six feet in size afforded means for lowering and raising the trucks used in moving hides.

Deceased was assisting one Tilley, defendant’s foreman, in moving hides from the first floor to the basement. Working together had taken down a truck loaded with hides, and when same was partially unloaded Tilley returned to the first floor to weigh another truck load of hides, and deceased was left in the basement to finish unloading. After Tilley weighed the other truck load of hides the loaded truck was moved upon the elevator at the first floor, and two other employees rode the elevator as it descended into the basement. When it descended a portion of the way a scream was heard, and then a crash before the elevator could be stopped. On examination it was found that Unrein had been sitting upon his empty truck placed in a position squarely under the elevator and that he had been crushed by it. Two vertebrae were broken and the spinal cord was injured. His injuries resulted in instant paralysis and in his death four .days later. Immediately upon being released from the elevator deceased exclaimed, “My God! my back is hurt; I thought I was on the elevator,” or words to that effect. The elevator was operated by an electric motor, which was only used in lifting the elevator. It descended by gravity, and was controlled by means of a brake. The brake was operated by an endless rope which hung down in the basement and was at all times in such position as to be easily reached from the elevator. The basement had no elevator pit. The platform of the elevator rested on the concrete floor of the basement. A concrete approach, from the level of the floor and attaining an elevation of about two inches at the edge of the elevator, had been built to facilitate the use of the elevator. With the platform of the elevator at the first floor of the build *365 ing a person in tile basement pushing a truck up this approach would necessarily encounter a drop of a couple of inches when the wheels rolled over the top of the approach onto the space where the elevator rests when down in the basement.

There was a skylight in the roof of the building which threw.light down upon the elevator and into the elevator shaft when the elevator was down in the basement. When the elevator was at the first floor this light was cut off. There were some windows on the west side of the basement forty-five or fifty feet from the elevator, and several electric lights, one north, one west and one south of the elevator. The evidence tends to show that the elevator shaft was fenced off on the north and south sides, and that only one of the lights was burning near' the elevator, and that all the other lights in the basement and the windows were more or less dingy and dirty. Defendant’s foreman was used as a witness for plaintiff and testified that the light was very poor down in the basement near the elevator shaft.

Deceased was twenty-seven years of age, and there is evidence that he had engaged in the same kind of work, but he had not been working there for sometime. He came back to work on the afternoon of the fatal accident, and had only worked an hour or so at the time he was fatally injured.

Plaintiff’s theory of the accident is that after unloading his truck deceased ran it to the elevator shaft and, thinking the platform of the elevator was resting on the basement floor, ran his truck into the shaft without noticing the want of light from the skylight, and that the other light was so dim and insufficient that he could not see that the platform was not in position; that automatic gates would have prevented deceased from running the truck into the shaft while the platform was at the first floor. The petition counted upon six acts of negligence, but the case was submitted to the jury- only on two grounds, to-wit, failure of the defend *366 ant to comply with a section of the building code of Kansas City which provided for enclosing or guarding all freight elevators with automatic gates, etc.* and failure to provide sufficient light around the elevator opening so that Unrein could see and know that the elevator platform was not at the basement landing. Defendant ádmits there is substantial proof of its negligence in these two particulars, and bases its contention that the case should not have been submitted to the jury because of contributory negligence on the part of deceased.

I. Was Deceased Guilty of Contributory Negligence as a matter of Law? Defendant contends that the light conditions were such that, if deceased had exercised any care at all, he would have known that the elevator was at the top floor and not down in the basement. If the elevator had been resting on the basement floor the light from the skylight above would undoubtedly have been sufficient to have disclosed its position. The question is whether the absence of light from the skylight would have warned a man of ordinary prudence,, possessing the experience of deceased and in the exercise of reasonable care for his own safety, that the elevator was not resting on the basement floor. Had the elevator been protected by automatic gates properly operating, it would have been impossible for deceased to have pushed his truck into the space usually occupied by the elevator without discovering the elevator was not there., Defendant concedes its failure to equip the elevator with such gates. The effect of the admitted violation by defendant of the city ordinance must therefore be taken into consideration in determining the negligence óf deceased as a matter of law.

Statutes which require guarding of dangerous machinery and that automatic gates be furnished at elevator entrances, are enacted for the very purpose of protecting those coming within their provisions against their own thoughtless acts in the performance of their ordinary duties. They contemplate -that at times such *367 persons will fail to observe the precautions necessary to protect them in the absence of guards, gates, etc. They cannot be held to be guilty of negligence as a matter of law for the doing or the failure to do many acts which would bar recovery if such acts were done in connection with machinery or appliances' not coming within the provisions of such statutes. The ordinance required automatic gates. The puipose of such requirement was to keep persons from falling into the shaft or being-struck by or caught in the elevator.

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 924, 295 Mo. 353, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unrein-v-oklahoma-hide-co-mo-1922.