Yeager v. St. Joseph Lead Co.

12 S.W.2d 520, 223 Mo. App. 245, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 144
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 520 (Yeager v. St. Joseph Lead 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
Yeager v. St. Joseph Lead Co., 12 S.W.2d 520, 223 Mo. App. 245, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 144 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

* Corpus Juris-Cyc References: Appeal and Error, 4CJ, section 3031, p. 1049, n. 82; Master and Servant, 39CJ, section 1336, p. 1146, n. 47; Release, 34Cyc, p. 1060, n. 13; p. 1076, n. 42; p. 1103, n. 18; p. 1106, n. 37. This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff while engaged in the work he was required to do as an employee of defendant. The injury occurred on November 6, 1924. The trial, which was had on September 21, 1927, with a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $2000, and defendant appeals.

At the time of his injury, plaintiff was working in defendant's mine in St. Francois county. The mine is something over 400 feet deep. There are two levels in the mine. Plaintiff was working on the lower level. The upper level is about eighty feet above the lower level. A chute or tunnel about eighty feet long extends diagonally from the upper to the lower level. The walls of the chute are made of rock, except the lower end, which is made of lumber. The chute is about ten feet square. The lower end of the chute, which is made of lumber, is about three one-half to four feet square. At the lower end of the chute, there is an iron door, which is operated with a lever. The chute was used to convey lead-bearing rocks from the upper to the lower level. The rocks were loaded into cars at the lower level, being discharged directly from the chute into the cars. When no cars were being loaded, the door of the chute was kept closed. It was the plaintiff's duty to tend the chute and punch the rocks with a crowbar so that they might flow through freely, and he had been engaged in that work for about two years. The rocks customarily sent through the chute were not larger than twelve inches in diameter, but occasionally rocks two and one-half to three feet in diameter were sent through. These rocks were difficult to handle, and were dangerous to plaintiff. He was so situated that he could not see or determine the size of the rocks in the performance of his work until they fell down and were discharged from the chute. The rocks in passing through the chute would become choked, and it was necessary for plaintiff to use the crowbar to loosen the rocks so that they would fall out through the door. The choking was worse when large rocks were sent through the chute. These large rocks were so heavy that when they became choked in the chute and were dislodged by plaintiff by the use of the crowbar they fell down through the door of the chute with such force as to be dangerous to plaintiff in the performance of his work. It was one of these large rocks that caused the plaintiff's injury. Plaintiff frequently complained to his foreman for sending these large rocks through the chute. He made such a complaint to the foreman on the morning of his injury, before he was injured, and the foreman promised him *Page 250 to have the rocks broken up, and directed him to go ahead with the work.

Concerning his injury, plaintiff testified: "I was injured between eleven and twelve o'clock in the morning. I used a bar four and one-half or five feet long to punch the rocks loose. I was injured punching the rocks loose, using this bar. I could not tell anything about the size of the rocks that were in there. But they all hung down there, and I punched them loose with the bar and they dropped. This big one, it caught my hand. There were several of these rocks all wedged in there. It caught my hand against the chute and the iron door. It was my right hand. When I went to jerk the bar down it got my hand down this way on the top of the iron door. A big rock fell down and went out. It mashed my hand. It bursted the little finger and the one next to the little finger. It broke the bone next to the little finger."

After plaintiff's injury, defendant's superintendent sent him to its physicians for treatment. They had an X-ray picture made of his injured hand, and he remained under their treatment until the 18th of December. On that day he saw the physicians. They made an examination of his hand, and told him that his hand would be all right, possibly weak for a while, but that it would be as well as it ever was, and that there would be no permanent injury. He then went immediately to the office of the defendant's claim agent, who sent him to the defendant's attorney. The attorney told him he was willing to pay him his wages, amounting to $175, and that he could get his job back. Laboring under the belief that his hand was not permanently injured and that he could go ahead with the work the defendant gave him to do, he accepted a check for $175, and signed a release, which is set up by defendant in bar of this action.

It is not disputed that the plaintiff's hand was seriously and permanently injured. This was expressly admitted by defendant at the trial. In January, following the signing of the release, defendant gave plaintiff a job at light work. He worked at this job for about a month, and then the defendant put him to shoveling. He did not have strength enough in his injured hand to use the shovel, and had to quit shoveling. He was then laid off for quite a while before defendant gave him another job. He testified that his hand was just weak; that he didn't have any use of the two injured fingers and that part of his hand; that he could straighten the little finger and the next one only about half; that he had been unable to straighten these fingers since his hand was injured; that he could not lift anything any more, only what he could lift with two fingers and thumb; that he could not grasp anything like he used to; that finding his hand did not get better but seemed to grow worse, he went to see one of defendant's physicians, who it seems had not previously examined *Page 251 or treated him, and that this physician tried to straighten his fingers, and told him that he had a crippled hand for life; that he then consulted a lawyer, tendered a return of the money he had received from defendant in settlement of his claim, and brought this suit.

No witnesses were produced on behalf of the defendant. The physicians who examined and treated plaintiff and told him his injuries were not permanent did not testify.

Defendant insists here that the release given by plaintiff is a conclusive bar to this action, and that the court below erred in refusing to so rule. It is well settled that a release of a claim for personal injuries may be avoided if given in reliance on fraudulent misrepresentations made by the releasee's physician as to the nature or extent of the injuries. The misrepresentations of the physician may sometimes be of such a nature that fraud cannot be predicated upon them, because they should be regarded merely as expressions of opinions honestly entertained. On the other hand, the misrepresentations may relate to an existing physical condition of the injured party, and in such case the releasee cannot prevent avoidance of the release on the theory that the misrepresentations were merely expressions of opinion on which fraud may not be predicated. And the question whether the misrepresentations should be regarded as misrepresentations of fact or mere expressions of opinion may be for the jury under all the evidence. Moreover, fraud may be predicated upon the giving of a mere opinion by the physician if the opinion is not honestly given. If he fraudulently gives an opinion to the patient regarding the nature and extent of the injuries or the probable time required for recovery, thereby misleading the patient into executing a release, the avoidance of the release cannot be defeated on the ground that the statement was not one of fact but merely of opinion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 520, 223 Mo. App. 245, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeager-v-st-joseph-lead-co-moctapp-1929.