Wright v. Kansas City Structural Steel Co.

157 S.W.2d 582, 236 Mo. App. 872, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 132
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 157 S.W.2d 582 (Wright v. Kansas City Structural Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Kansas City Structural Steel Co., 157 S.W.2d 582, 236 Mo. App. 872, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 132 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

This is an appeal, duly perfected, from a judgment for $5000 rendered in favor of plaintiff on account of personal injuries alleged to have been received through the negligence of defendant, and while plaintiff was engaged as an employee of another *Page 879 company. Errors assigned pertain chiefly to the ruling of the court on a demurrer to the evidence, and in the giving and refusal of instructions. The main instruction authorizing recovery is assailed for the principal reason that it failed to require a finding of essential elements and that plaintiff failed to establish the essential elements of a submissible case.

Plaintiff was injured while engaged in construction work on the municipal water plant in Kansas City, Kansas. The plant was being reconstructed in part and extended. A portion of the work included the building of large coal hoppers. The Patti Construction Company was the general contractor. The Kansas City Structural Steel Company was a subcontractor to do certain steel, iron and structural work, including the steel work on the hoppers. The Gunite Construction Company was another subcontractor to do the work of lining the steel hoppers with reinforced concrete. For brevity, these companies will be referred to hereafter as the Patti Company, the Steel Company, and the Gunite Company.

Plaintiff, at the time of his injury, was an employee of the Gunite Company whose foreman on the job was Harry Miller. The Steel Company's foreman was named Murl Miller, and Charles Chaney was assistant superintendent for the Steel Company. Guy G. Manlove was superintendent for the Patti Company.

The work of the Steel Company on the hoppers necessarily preceded that of the Gunite Company. Four adjoining hoppers were constructed in a row. They are described as forming rectangular funnels. The outside was covered with riveted sheets of steel. They were designed to receive coal from a conveyor belt above them and to feed the furnaces below through a chute extending from the bottom of the hoppers. The Steel Company had completed its work on the hoppers some weeks before the accident, but a crew of men had returned and was engaged in removing and rebuilding what is called a bridge to support the conveyor belt above the hoppers. The accident happened in what is designated in evidence as hopper No. 2. In this hopper a beam extends across it about six or seven feet from the south side and about five or six feet below the top of the hopper. The south side of this hopper was sloping all the way from the top to the bottom. There was a 2x10 or 2x12 board with one end resting on the beam and the south end resting upon and tied on the ramp or side of the hopper and within a foot or a foot and a half of the west wall. Plaintiff and a co-worker for the Gunite Company were standing on this board taking measurements when it broke and let them fall. This board had been placed in position by one of the Steel Company's men during the time of its work, and this board together with other interior boards on each side of the hopper were used by the steel men during the course of their work. When the steel men finished, the board in question was not removed. The work of the steel men on *Page 880 the hoppers had been completed several weeks before the Gunite men came on the job to do their part of the work. In the meantime, according to defendant's evidence not controverted, the general contractor was to do all clean up work and remove all rubbish and other things in the hoppers preparatory for the work of the Gunite Company. The board in question was not removed from hopper No. 2 when the Gunite Company took charge. Plaintiff and his co-worker were ordered by their foreman to get into the hopper in question and take meansurements without procuring their own scaffolding which had been used in an adjoining hopper.

To test the ruling on the demurrer a rather detailed statement of the testimony of plaintiff's witnesses and of the evidence favorable to plaintiff is required. An understanding of the evidence relied upon by plaintiff will be assisted by a statement of plaintiff's theory of the case made by his counsel in their brief as follows:

"Plaintiff's petition pleaded and his recovery instruction submitted the theory that defendant, a subcontractor, building hoppers and other steel work connected therewith, at the Kansas City, Kansas municipal water plant, selected and put into a hopper which it was constructing a board for a walkway; that it was a regular custom for employees of one contractor to use a walkway so placed for such purpose by employees of another contractor or subcontractor; that the custom was known to defendant, and it knew it would likely be used by others and it and its foreman intended and expected employees of thesubcontractor for whom plaintiff was working to use the boardunder such custom, and that under the same or similar circumstances a reasonable and careful person situated as defendant would use ordinary care to have a reasonably safe board for the use to be reasonably expected or would remove it or forbid its use; and the board was partly sawed in two and not reasonably safe, and that plaintiff, pursuant to such custom and at the invitation of defendant, went upon it for his employer and it broke and that defendant failed to exercise ordinary care by reason of the facts, and that such failure directly caused plaintiff's injuries, because the defective board broke in two and caused him to fall below."

Plaintiff testified that he went to work for the Gunite Company about August 5. The work of lining one of the hoppers had been completed prior to Monday morning, August 9. He described the process of lining the hoppers with wire mesh tied to rods which were fastened to clips on the metal surface. This was to receive a coat of concrete, to be applied in a spraying process according to the Gunite system, which would form the lining for the hopper and prevent the coal from corroding or otherwise injuring the metal part of the hopper. When the Gunite Company went on the job it took its own boards and scaffolding material which were used in its work on the first hopper. Plaintiff stated that they were to start on hopper No. *Page 881 2, Monday morning; that he did not know whether others had been working in there before or not; that he had nothing to do with putting the board in place; that it was there and he had seen the steel men and Patti's men use it; that his foreman, Harry Miller, told him "to jump in there and get these measurements;" before he went to work he heard his co-worker, George Boring, ask Murl Miller, one of the Steel Company's foremen, if he was going to use that scaffolding or tear the scaffold out; that he did not hear the answer; he was a little hard of hearing. Plaintiff then stated: "When I started to go where the other scaffold was in the other hopper, they hollered to me to come back, that they were going to use that scaffold." It was either Boring or Harry Miller, his foreman, who called to him. He was then ordered to get in the hopper and he and Boring climbed over the west side of the hopper and down on the board in question. They were working there, taking measurements, when the board broke. The board was a 2 × 10, about eight feet long and spanned a space of six or seven feet. After the board broke he observed a saw cut in it nearly half way through.

On cross-examination, the following questions and answers appear:

"Q. Harry Miller was your foreman, and he then told you to jump down in there, in the hopper, which would be hopper No. 2, and to get those measurements? A. Yes, sir.

"Q. And that is the reason you went down in the hopper at the time? A. Yes, sir.

"Q.

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W.2d 582, 236 Mo. App. 872, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-kansas-city-structural-steel-co-moctapp-1941.