Wommack v. Orr

176 S.W.2d 477, 352 Mo. 113, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 549
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 6, 1943
DocketNo. 38634.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 S.W.2d 477 (Wommack v. Orr) 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
Wommack v. Orr, 176 S.W.2d 477, 352 Mo. 113, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 549 (Mo. 1943).

Opinions

Action to recover $25,000 damages for injuries alleged to be the result of the occupational disease of silicosis, and alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. At the close of plaintiff's case the trial court directed a verdict for defendant. The jury returned a verdict as directed; judgment was entered thereon, and plaintiff appealed.

As to the negligence alleged, plaintiff, in the brief, says: "The petition charges common law negligence only. There are two specific charges of negligence in the petition, first, that the defendant negligently failed to provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to work, and second, that the defendant negligently failed to warn the plaintiff of the dangerous conditions under which the plaintiff was required to work, although the defendant knew or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care that the plaintiff's place of work and the conditions under which he worked were dangerous and would injure plaintiff's health."

The answer was a general denial. There is no claim that the cause is one under the Workmen's Compensation Act.

Plaintiff testified that he commenced work for defendant in November, 1932; worked till February, 1935, then was on the farm about a year, and returned to defendant in March, 1936, and continued to work for defendant until July 11, 1940. Plaintiff's work was hauling ore. Three men constituted a hauling crew, and the ore was loaded on a truck at an ore bin and then hauled to a railroad car and unloaded therein, and plaintiff "was paid by the car." Part of the time plaintiff worked in the cars into which the ore was unloaded from the trucks. Of his work in the car plaintiff testified:

"They (the two other men) hauled the ore to the car and shoveled in the car and my job was to put it back in the car so that the car could be loaded up to capacity and be kept away from the door as much as possible. They went to the bins and loaded it in the truck. . . . When the truck gets to the car, two of them unload and the man in the car throws it back. . . . This dust would fly; get in your mouth and your eyes and nose and your ears; all over you and *Page 116 you have to hunt air. By that I mean when the dust would get too thick from float ore, you would have to hunt air. . . . I seen it so thick you had to hunt air so you could breathe with any ease at all. . . . My face and nose would be anywhere from, I should say, two feet to three feet from the ore. . . . The two men standing in the truck picked up the canvas (between the truck and the car) and give it a flip so what ore is on there would go in the car. That would cause just as much or more dust to accumulate than the shovel would. . . . I was exposed to this dust practically all of the time in the eight to fourteen hours a day that I worked. . . . The dust accumulated on my arms and on my face, on my clothes. . . . It got in my nose and my eyes and my ears. I could certainly feel the effects of breathing the dust; it would just be dust in your nose or your mouth; you could see this dust in the air through the sunshine; you could see it otherwise than in the sun any time if you wanted to look for it. In the air the dust in the float ore [479] looked more like, I should say, smoke than anything else."

Plaintiff also worked at the bins in loading the ore, and of this work, he testified: "Dust accumulated around the loading operations from the bins to the truck. Some of these bins are closed bins and some are open. I have seen dust in closed float bins until I would have to go to the window and stick my head out and get a good breath. There would be particles of dust on the coarse ore there the same as there would be in the car, and when shoveling it out of the truck the dust would be just practically the same as other places. The conditions were the same there, I will say, as they were the other places because the stuff flies there the same as it would be in loading into the truck or backing into the car. You could see it in the air if you wanted to look for it; you didn't stop to look for it, of course, when you were working that way. . . . I first learned that I had dust on my lungs in April, 1939. . . . There was no interruption in my employment with Mr. Orr from March, 1936, when I went back to work for him until I quit on July 11, 1940. Around a year or so before I quit I noticed that there was something wrong with me; I noticed shortness of breath; easily fatigued, weakness. About two months before I quit I had pains in my chest. . . .

"I have made complaint to Mr. Whitescarver (defendant's foreman) about these dust conditions; I complained about the dust and the stuff flying and he always said it won't hurt you; I complained a number of times; I couldn't enumerate them from the time I first started to work until I quit, and his answer was always the same — that it won't hurt you. I was never provided with a mask or any protective device. . . .

"After this law suit was filed, I went around to the various mines that I worked at and secured some samples of ore from each; . . . I believe I got the samples in a tobacco can and marked each can *Page 117 where I got the ore from and delivered them to my attorney, Mr. Foulke. The ore I got samples of and gave to him was practically the same ore that I had been shoveling and handling and hauling for Mr. Orr for the past seven or eight years; was practically from the same piles and secured from the same mines and the same mills."

The samples of ore delivered by plaintiff to his counsel were classed as coarse ores and flotation ores, six of each. C.V. Millar, an assayer in Joplin for 42 years, examined these as to percentage of silica content, and the percentage that would pass through a 100 mesh and 200 mesh screen, and, as we interpret, found as follows:

COARSE ORES

No. of Through Through Sample 100-mesh screen 200-mesh screen Silica content -------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 1.05% .14% 2.26% 2 13.30% 1.93% 3.42% 3 20.56% 1.12% 2 % 4 11.10% .80% 7.40% 5 1.95% .35% 4.80% 6 2.61% .39% 3.25%

FLOTATION ORES

No. of Through Through Sample 100-mesh screen 200-mesh screen Silica content -------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 99.75% 89.65% 2.58% 8 99.55% 88.50% 6.05% 9 99.90% 70 % 3.62% 10 93 % 85.10% .74% 11 99 % 78% .74% 12 99 % 81.50% 2.66%

Millar testified that he made a composite sample from about 7500 samples of ore which he, himself, collected over a period of four and a half years, from the Oklahoma and Joplin districts (plaintiff's work for defendant was in both these districts); that the number of samples from each district were about the same. The average silica content of the twelve samples collected by plaintiff was 3.29% and that of the 7500 samples collected by Millar was 4.72%. The over all average silica content was 4.005%.

Dr. A.B. Murray testified that he had examined some 3,000 men "for chest ailments"; that he examined plaintiff and found that he had silicosis; that "silicosis is a destructive process of the lymphatic nodules of the lungs; . . .

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W.2d 477, 352 Mo. 113, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wommack-v-orr-mo-1943.