Judges: Bradley, Farrington, Cox
Filed Date: 1/14/1922
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
This is an action for personal injury. The cause was tried below to a jury, and verdict
Plaintiff was employed by defendant at Remoc in Bollinger County, and was engaged in loading logs from tbe ground onto cars. The loading outfit was on a spur or switch adjacent to the railroad. The loading was carried on by steam power, wire cable, tongs, etc. A car of coal was placed on a switch leading to the loader, and in order to unload this car of coal it was necessary to move it down the switch to the coal bin. To do this the wire cable, the tongs and a pulley attached to the car of coal were used. The tongs were made fast to a stump and the cable passed through the attached pully and then fastened to one of defendant’s engines on adjacent logging track. The cable was fastened to the tongs by being tied to the ring thereof. The force exerted on the cable drew the knot in the cable at the tongs’ ring so tight that it could not be loosened except by cutting the cable. After the car of coal was moved, plaintiff laid the knot in the cable on a railroad rail, and with a cold chisel and a hammer was attempting to cut the cable to release the tongs. While so engaged and after plaintiff had made four or five licks a small piece of severed wire about a quarter of an inch in length struck plaintiff in the left eye and totally destroyed the sight thereof.
Plaintiff alleges that defendant’s foreman directed him to cut the cable and that said cable where plaintiff attempted to cut it was rotten and brittle. Omitting some preliminaries the petition alleges: ‘ ‘ That the said iron cable was old and at the end in which the said knot was tied as aforesaid was frazzled and the many small wires of which the same was composed had become loose, unraveled and unwoven and this defendant and its said foreman, officers, agents and employees knew or should have known, and the said defendant and its officers, agents and employees had caused and permitted the said wire rope or cable to be dragged in the mud and water until the same and the many small wires composing it had
Plaintiff states that the said wire rope in its said rotten and brittle condition was not a reasonably safe appliance for the work and purpose for which plaintiff as aforesaid used and worked with the same for the defendant, for the reason that its said rotten and brittle condition, in case it became necessary to cut the said wire rope as aforesaid, was liable to cause the said small wires composing the said wire rope to break into small pieces during such cutting and cause injury to the person cutting the same, and its said rotten and brittle condition and the danger arising therefrom were at the time known to the defendant and its said foreman and agent and servants, or should have been known to them by the exercise of ordinary care upon their part, and the said wire rope was furnished by the defendant for the said use as aforesaid, and the said defendant was in duty bouftd to furnish the plaintiff with reasonably safe tools and appliances and this said duty towards the plaintiff said defendant neglected and, on the contrary, did furnish for use in the said work in which the plaintiff was engaged the said wire rope in its said rotten and brittle ’condition, and plaintiff alleges that it was negligence upon the part of defendant toward the plaintiff to furnish the said wire rope in its said rotten, brittle, unsafe and dangerous condition for use in the said work of the plaintiff for the defendant, and that as a direct result of the said negligence and carelessness of the defendant in furnishing as aforesaid the said defective wire, the plaintiff was injured. ’ ’
Defendant predicates error upon the court’s action in (1) overruling an ore terms objection to the petition; (2) overruling its demurrer at the close of the case; (3) giving instructions; (4) failing to grant a new trial on the ground of alleged unfair tactics or conduct on the part of plaintiff in concealing the fact that he had in his possession the section of the wire cable where the knot was cut, and notwithstanding this possession plaintiff made much ado about defendant’s failure to produce the said section of cable.
We do not think that plaintiff can recover, and it is not necessary to consider any assignment except the refusal of the peremptory request. This record to our mind shows conclusively that plaintiff was injured in such manner as to render defendant not liable. Plaintiff was either injured because of his own carelessness in cutting the cable, or from a condition of the cable which defendant could not in the exercise of ordinary care know or anticipate, or that plaintiff’s injury was due to a pure accident without fault on the part of any one. The burden of plaintiff’s petition is that defendant was negligent in furnishing him an old rotten and brittle cable, and that when he went to cut it the strands broke because of this old, rotten and brittle condition and a piece struck plaintiff in eye. The evidence fails utterly to show that the cable was old, rotten and brittle or defective in any way. The cable was shown to be somewhat rusty on the outside, and the end near the knot flared; but this falls far short of tending to establish that the cable was old, rotten and brittle, and that by reason thereof the slivers or sections were easily dislodged or broken off. Plaintiff testified that the cable was old, and that some of the inside strands were rusty and that it
It was shown that this cable was in good condition ; that it was used continuously after plaintiff’s injury, and was in use at the time of the trial a year after plaintiff was injured. It was shown that eight empty cars had been pulled with this same cable just a week before the trial. It was further shown that the cable was the best that could be bought for the purpose for which it was used. The evidence further shows that the piece which struck plaintiff in the eye was cut at both ends, thus showing that plaintiff did not hold the chisel in the.same place while attempting to cut the cable. If this was the cause of plaintiff’s injury then he cannot complain, since his misfortune is due to his own act and not defendant’s. It was further shown that it could not be determined from a reasonable inspection whether pieces would fly when a cable was cut in the manner plaintiff was employing when he was injured; also it was shown that pieces would be as likely to fly from a new cable as an old one when being cut in such manner. Plaintiff testified that where he cut the cable it was covered with rust, and that a number of severed pieces similar to the one that struck him in the eye were on the railroad tie immediately beneath where he was cutting. Plaintiff also said, as will be noticed from his evidence, that he had cut cables before but had never seen particles fly as was the case when he was injured. This only shows, allowing the utmost inference, that particles or pieces were separated from the cable, and were thrown off, but it does not show that defendant by the exercise
Measured by the demurrer plaintiff’s evidence is accepted as true as well as every reasonable inference deducible therefrom. [Maginnis v. Railroad, 268 Mo. 667, 187 S. W. 1065; Link v. Hamlin, 270 Mo. 319, 193 S. W. 587; Bingaman v. Hannah, 270 Mo. 611, 194 S. W. 276; Holweg v. Bell Telephone Co., 195 Mo. 149, 93 S. W. 262; Link v. Railroad, 233 S. W. (Mo. App.) 834.] But when we consider plaintiff’s case in the light of the demurrer we find nothing that tends to show that defendant was negligent in any manner. It is true that negligence is not susceptible of direct proof, but is an inference from facts in evidence. [Hoel v. Land Co., 173 Mo. App. 557, 158 S. W. 694; Callahan v. Warne et al., 40 Mo. 131.] In the last cited case negligence is defined thus: “Negligence is a thing which by its very nature pertains to human conduct, and the action of the mind and will. It is something invisible, intanglible, and for the most part incapable of direct proof, like sensible facts, or physical events. It is, in general, a matter of inference from other facts and circumstances which admit of direct proof, and which may raise a presumption of the truth of the main fact to be proved. These facts and circumstances must be such as would warrant a jury in inferring from them the fact of negligence, by reasoning in the ordinary way, according to the natural and proper relations of things, and consistently with the common sense and experience of mankind.”
If the minds of reasonable men may differ as to whether or not negligence may be inferred from the facts in evidence then the question is for the jury. [Hegberg v. Railroad, 164 Mo. App. 514, 147 S. W. 192; Power v.
The judgment should be reversed and it is so ordered.