Fouts v. Swift & Co.

ELLISON, J.

— This is an action for personal injury which resulted in plaintiff’s favor in the trial court. We can dispose of a considerable part of defendant’s objections to the judgment by correcting an impression which must have prevailed when the brief was written as to the nature of the cause of action which plaintiff has set out. He has not complained of defective machinery in the sense of being compelled to use such machinery. The machine which injured him was not one with which he worked, but it was one situated near by the place where he worked and, as he contends, made that place unsafe. Under the latter view of the petition it clearly states a cause of action and all objections on that head which have been urged by defendant are not well taken.'

The defendant is. a corporation engaged in killing and packing meats at the city of St. Joseph and in such business it conducted a cooperage department where it made barrels and where plaintiff was engaged as a servant. There were fires where the barrels were heated, and when heated they were passed out and along to a number of employees who performed their assigned part of the work in the process of making them a finished barrel. Plaintiff’s duty was to receive the barrels when heated, “level” them on a plane surface provided for that purpose, and then pass them on to the man assigned to *530perform the next duty upon them. The fires and the nature of the service in this process of manufacture made it quite warm and so defendant provided an electric fan for the comfort of those there engaged. The fan consisted of a hub or center piece from which several steel paddles projected — these revolved noiselessly and with exceeding great rapidity. The fan was suspended from the ceiling of the room and came down partially through a platform near the end. The platform itself did not rest upon the floor, but was held suspended about five feet and four inches above the floor by four or more pieces of timber of about two by four inches dimension. These timbers partially enclosed the fan above the platform and for about four inches below. Yet a person could go under the platform between the ends of these timbers and thus come in contact with that portion of the ends of the paddles of the fan which revolve below the platform. The platform was between two and two and one-half feet square, and the fan was at the side or end furtherest away from where plaintiff worked. A brick cross-wall seemed to have been so constructed that the end of it came against the platform near the center. At the time plaintiff was hurt there was a short lull in the work and he had taken a broom and swept away some dirt or trash which would accumulate from time to time from the work. He placed the broom in the corner made by the brick wall and platform where they came together and when he was in the act of turning around he found himself in such close contact with the platform that he instinctively dodged his head down till it cleared the platform, and in making the swung of the turn with his head bent forward or outward from a perpendicular line with his body, it came in contact with the fan wdiich, as before stated, extended some inches under the platform, and received the serious injury of which he complains.

. As the barrels were heated they were started on to*531wards plaintiff by rolling under the platform and fan, and it became necessary for him to reach under for them many times a day. Plaintiff had spoken to- the foreman in regard to danger from the fan and had been told that it would be attended to when “they could get around to it.” It had also been stated between them that the fan' ought to be screened. Plaintiff said that he knew of the danger, but he thought he could get on safely by being careful.

In stating how plaintiff came in contact with the fan we have not pretended to follow the language of any particular witness, but have described it according to the way the evidence shows it must necessarily have occurred. We are satisfied that a prima facie case was made for the plaintiff. There is no room for doubt that the plaintiff was hurt while engaged in the performance of his duty as an employee. The only questions in the case are, whether the injury was a risk of his employment and whether he was guilty of contributory negligence?

It appears clear that it was negligence in the defendant to leave so dangerous a device (noiseless in operation) as an electric fan to be hung so low down from the ceiling that one could walk into, or against it, and not have it, in some way, shut off from contact with those who might be at work near it. It was not machinery with which plaintiff was required to work, but it constituted a dangerous condition to the safety of the place. As much so as would be an open and unguarded well, or an unguarded opening in a floor. We said in Zellars v. Water & Light Co., 92 Mo. App. 121, in speak- ■ ing of the master’s duties to the servant: “He does not insure the safety of the place to work, but he does insure that he will not be negligent in his effort to have it safe. And if he is negligent in that respect, he is liable absolutely to the servant, unless, of course,- the servant was himself guilty of contributory negligence; or, unless it *532be one of those instances (which it is not necessary, in this case, to define) where the servant assumes the risk of injury.” In this case, even under that branch of authority which takes the most extreme view of assumption of risk exonerating the master (Glenmount Lumber Co. v. Roy, 126 Fed. Rep. 524), the Avarning which this plaintiff gave the foreman, and the- latter’s assurance that he would protect the fan so soon as he could get around to it, took the question of assuming the risk out of the case. Hough v. Railroad, 100 U. S. 213, 225.

Practically then there is but one question — and that is contributory negligence. It is the theory of defendant that as plaintiff might easily have walked around the platform and avoided the fan, he need not have stooped under it and ran into the fan. The theory of the plaintiff is that in the act of turning around, he found himself about to- go against the platform and that he stooped or “ducked” his head under it and thereby came in contact with the fan. There was evidence to support that view and we will not -say, as a matter of law, that under such circumstances he .'should have caught himself (as possibly he might have done) and walked around. Defendant says that he must have walked clear under the platform, that is, from one side to the other, as the fan was on the far -side from him. But it must be borne in mind that the platform was a very small affair, only between twenty-four and thirty inches wide, and that in “ducking” under it,, as expressed by witnesses, one might strike his head against an object on the opposite side while his body was just under the edge of the other side. Counsel use the expression that plaintiff to strike the fan would have had to pass “clear under” or “clear over to the other side,” as though it was quite a distance and that one Avo-uld have to- deliberately Avalk over to the fan. The fact is, as before intimated, that from one -side to the other of the small platform *533was, perhaps, within the circle one’s head would describe in turning round in a stooped position.

The objections to evidence was numerous. What we have already written disposes of many of them. The remaining we believe not well taken. We think that nothing was admitted or excluded which in any manner affected the substantial merits of the case.

The instructions given for plaintiff were proper and were in keeping with the law as it is laid down in this State. [Curtis v. McNair, 173 Mo. 270; Wendler v. People’s Furnishing Co., 165 Mo. 527; Settle v. Railroad, 127 Mo. 336; Pauck v. Dressed Beef Co., 159 Mo. 467.]

A careful examination of the whole record satisfies us that no error was committed which materially affected the merits of the case and the judgment must therefore be affirmed.

All concur.