Urie v. Thompson

210 S.W.2d 98, 357 Mo. 738, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 8, 1948
DocketNo. 39908.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 210 S.W.2d 98 (Urie v. Thompson) 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
Urie v. Thompson, 210 S.W.2d 98, 357 Mo. 738, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 681 (Mo. 1948).

Opinions

Action under Federal Employers' Liability Act, 45 USCA, Sec. 51 et seq., charging violations of the Boiler Inspection Act, 45 USCA, Sec. 22 et seq. A jury returned a verdict awarding plaintiff $30,000 damages and defendant, trustee of Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, has appealed from the judgment entered.

Heretofore the case has been considered upon the question of the sufficiency of the original petition [Urie v. Thompson,352 Mo. 211, 176 S.W.2d 471], it being held the petition stated facts sufficient to support a recovery for a breach of the Boiler Inspection Act. Upon remand, plaintiff amended his petition to more specifically allege violations of the Act.

[100] The petition as amended contained the allegations that defendant caused, allowed and permitted noxious, deleterious and poisonous dusts and sand, in harmful quantities, the same varying from day to day, to enter the cabs and decks of locomotives in which plaintiff was required to work as a fireman, whereby plaintiff gradually inhaled silica particles resulting in silicosis, or silico-tuberculosis — defendant's locomotives were unsafe to operate in the service and constituted an unnecessary peril to life and limb in that dusts and sand would and did enter into and permeate the cabs and decks in quantities harmful to plaintiff to breathe; the sanding devices would loose sand so that harmful quantities would come from the same when set in operation; the sand domes were loose at the boiler connections; the sand pipes were broken off, or were loose or perforated; the traps holding sand were not in proper mechanical condition and were not properly adjusted; the connections between the boiler and the deck were old, worn, or loose; the grate-staff riggings were without covers, or the covers were warped, or bent, or did not fit; the floor boards were worn, or loose, or contained open spaces; and defendant failed to maintain his locomotives, cabs and decks where plaintiff was required to work, in safe condition.

Defendant denied the locomotives were in an unsafe condition; and denied plaintiff became disabled as a result of the inhalation of any deleterious substance entering into the cabs and decks of defendant's engines. Defendant alleged the locomotives were regularly inspected by inspectors of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and that all regulations of the Commission had been complied with; averred silicosis is not within the purview of the Boiler Inspection Act; and further interposed the plea of limitation of action (45 USCA, Sec. 56). *Page 743

[1] On this appeal there are thirty-two assignments of error. Not all of the assignments were developed in appellant-defendant's brief by citation of authorities and argument. The assignments of error neither briefed nor argued are, for the purpose of this appeal, abandoned. Petty v. Kansas City Public Service Co. (Mo Sup.), 198 S.W.2d 684; Supreme Court Rule 1.08. The scope of review of the instant case, an action at law tried upon facts with a jury, is generally governed by Sections 123 and 140, Civil Code of Missouri, Laws of Missouri, 1943, p. 390 and pp. 395-6, and Rule 1.08, supra, but with a regard for Supreme Court Rule 3.27. See In re Duren,355 Mo. 1222, 200 S.W.2d 343, treating with a case tried upon facts without a jury.

It is said by defendant that the petition does not state and the evidence does not support a claim under the Boiler Inspection Act; and that plaintiff's action is barred by limitation; and errors are assigned in the admission and exclusion of evidence, and in instructing the jury.

Plaintiff, now 57 years old, had commenced work for the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company July 4, 1908, and left defendant's employment in May, 1940. He was principally employed as a fireman on engines on the line from Joplin to Kansas City. He had been interested in a mine and, early in his employment and when he was on the extra board, ran a hoister and pumped water for about sixty days down at "Tan Yard Holler." He also worked out at "Smeltry Hill" for about three weeks; "put in a pump and operated it a while." He had not worked as a "regular miner, down in the mine getting out ore." In 1914 he had "walking typhoid"; he "laid off" and went to Oklahoma, being away from his work with the Missouri Pacific five or six months; however, he worked on all but about 60 days of that time for a contractor in the Oklahoma oil fields.

The sand used in the sanding devices of defendant's locomotives was "tailings" from the lead and zinc mines of Webb City and Carterville, Jasper County. The tailings were also used as ballast on the roadbed. Various samples of the tailings or sand contained 97.2% to 97.87% free silicon dioxide. Sand used in the engines was finely ground. A sample of sand exhibited by defendant and stated to have been crushed under the wheels of a locomotive contained 97.8% silicon dioxide — 96% passed through a 20-mesh screen, [101] 74% passed through a 40-mesh screen, 46% passed through an 80-mesh screen, 45% passed through a 100-mesh screen, 29% passed through a 200-mesh screen, and 9% passed through a 325-mesh screen. 8.25% of the particles were of 10 microns size or smaller. Of the sand exhibited by defendant (which, it was stated, had not been crushed beneath the wheels of a locomotive), no particles passed through a 325-mesh screen. A witness for plaintiff testified of a test made by him at plaintiff's request. Sand, stated to have been procured from *Page 744 defendant's sand house at Joplin, was placed in a glass jar. The jar and contents were shaken and a sample of the air "in the space at the top of the jar" was found to contain 5,100,000 particles smaller than 10 microns, and 750,000 particles smaller than 5 microns per cubic foot of air. (Physicians, witnesses for plaintiff, testified the specific concentration of particles under 10 microns in size and of 97% free silica which may "be present in the air a person breathes without harmful effects" is 3,000,000 to 5,000,000 per cubic foot.) The witness was asked, "If you had this sand blown from the sander on the engine two-thirds of the length of the engine by air pressure, if it was this kind of sand, and it was blown that distance, you would have a much lesser percentage of particles smaller than ten microns? A. My answer would be conjecture. I have had no experience in testing samples under those conditions. The concentration present in the air under those conditions would be the result of many factors."

Plaintiff testified that in May, 1940, he commenced to have pains "all through" his chest; he got very short of breath and "kept getting a little worse and a little worse." He consulted a physician who took X-ray photographs; and later, June 21st, plaintiff reported to the hospital of the Missouri Pacific Association at St. Louis for examination. X-ray films disclosed a mottled "snow storm effect" (diffused throughout the upper two-thirds of both lungs), said by experts, witnesses for plaintiff, to be indicatory, in their opinion, of nodules formed in the calcification of the pulmonary fibrosis, scar tissue, formed after a person has harmfully inhaled silica dust into the lung structure itself. Plaintiff's experts "came to the conclusion the man was suffering from a disease known as silicosis."

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W.2d 98, 357 Mo. 738, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urie-v-thompson-mo-1948.