Jarrell v. Blackbird Block Coal Co.

JOHNSON, J.

Action by a servant to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by negligence of his master in failing to exercise reasonable care to provide him a reasonably safe place in which to work. The answer contains a general traverse *556and pleas of contributory negligence and assumed risk. Tbe cause is here on the appeal of defendants from a judgment of Five Thousand Dollars recovered by plaintiff in the circuit court.

Defendants, engaged in operating a coal mine in Adair county, employed plaintiff, an experienced miner, to work with a gang engaged in opening an air shaft which had been clogged at the top by earth and debris from an extensive cave-in. The shaft was about eighty feet deep and some earth had fallen to the bottom but dislodged and broken timbers had caught in the shaft at a point some twenty or twenty-five feet below the surface and, together with. a large volume of caved-in earth formed, an obstruction that effectually choked the shaft. This prevented ventilation of the mine and work was stopped therein until ventilation could be restored. The diameter of the cave-in at the surface was about eighteen feet ánd the sides converged downward with the shaft as the spout of the funnel.

The method adopted by the .foreman for clearing away the obstruction was as follows: A platform was built across the hole and a hoisting apparatus operated by horse power was placed on the platform. Men were sent down to take out the earth and debris and send it up in a tub which was lowered and raised by the hoist. This work was in progress when plaintiff was hired. Thé work was dangerous; plaintiff knew of its dangerous character and he and his fellow-workmen were paid higher wages than they would have received for working in the mine. There were two principal sources of danger in the work, viz., the obstructing timbers were likely to give way at any time, and, together with their load fall to the bottom of the shaft and, on account of the wet condition of the earth, landslides were likely to occur from the sloping sides of the hole and injure the laborers. To guard against the first danger, each miner was equipped with a life-line consisting of a rope attached at one end' to a belt around his waist and at the *557other end to a post at the top. No safeguard was provided for injury against landslides. The foreman and laborers looked for and the latter removed loose earth from the sides but several small and harmless slides occured during the work. Finally, while the men were still at work a landslide of earth weighing a ton or more occurred near the place where plaintiff was working. The foreman, who was at the top, seized the lifeline and attempted to prill plaintiff away from danger, but plaintiff was caught and severely injured by the falling' earth. ' The work in question was conducted' under the immediate supervision and control of the foreman. Defendants contend that the method employed was reasonably safe, while plaintiff contends that it was not and that defendants negligently failed in the performance of them duty to exercise reasonable care to furnish their servants a reasonably safe place in which to work.

Witnesses for plaintiff say that the usual and only safe way of doing such work required that false cribbing be put in from the beginning of the work. On cross examination, the foreman was forced to admit that false cribbing would have protected the men from landslides and that the reason it was not put in was the lack of sufficient material. We quote from his testimony:

“Q. Then one of the dangers in the work that occurs is the possible slide? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You had no way to protect them against the slide, had you? A. Why, I expect it could have been done, if necessary.
“Q. According to the plan that you adopted in clearing up that shaft, did you have any way of protecting the men down in the shaft from danger of a slide? A. Providing it was necessary, I expect I had.
“Q. Answer the question. A. Why, yes, sir.
“Q. . What was it? A. Why, I could have put in false cribbing if necessary.
“Q. You could have put in false cribbing from 'the start? A. Certainly, I could.
*558“Q. That ’would have protected them from a slide, wouldn’t it? A. Well, in some cases it would if it wouldn’t crush the cribbing in.
“Q. Wouldn’t it in this case if you had put in cribbing, false or permanent, wouldn’t that have protected the men that were working down there from the danger of a slide? ■ A. Well, yes, sir, I could.
“Q. When did you commence getting timbers for the purpose of making a crib there? A. Well, we had part of them there about the time that we did start, but we hadn’t sufficient on account of the wet. weather.
“Q. And that’s the reason why you didn’t put it in, is it? A. Not altogether, sir.
“Q. Well, what do you mean when you say you didn’t haArn enough timber there? A. Well, because I claim I didn’t have enough timber to finish the shaft-all the way down.
“Q. And you was going to make the shaft as soon as you got the timber? A. I was going to start and Avhen I got down to that place where I could see the Availing of the old shaft I was going to curb it up and there wasn’t much danger in that at all, unless a man went and disobeyed orders.”

Defendants argue that their demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. The argument may be reduced to three propositions, viz., first, defendants were guilty of no breach of duty to plaintiff; second, the risk of injury from landslides was one of the natural risks of the employment assumed, by plaintiff and, third, plaintiff was guilty in law of contributory negligence. We shall discuss these propositions in the order of their statement.

We think the evidence tends to accuse defendants of negligence. The right of an employer to conduct his own business in his own way is a rule pertaining to the relation of master aand servant too well settled to call for discussion. But this right has its limitations and the law wisely has fixed those limits, that the right *559shall not impinge upon the obligation of the master to exercise reasonable care to provide his servant a reasonably safe place in which to work. The master cannot relieve himself of any part of such obligation by contract express or implied — not even by contract supported by the consideration of an increased wage. The failure to exercise reasonable care is negligence; negligence is a positive wrong, and the policy of the law denounces as immoral and unjust any contract by which the master seeks to protect himself at the risk of his servant, against the consequences of his own wrongdoing. The master is not bound to adopt the safest ■ method of doing the work in hand, but is bound to adopt a reasonably safe method. The evidence supports the inference that the method pursued in the present instance was not the best and was not even reasonably safe. The soil was a sandy clay and being wet was-likely to slip. Despite the vigilance of the foreman and workmen in removing dirt from places that appeared unsafe, slides had occurred. The .tub, when loaded, weighed about five hundred pounds and, since the platform supports rested on the ground adjacent to the hole, the pressure and vibrations produced by hoisting added to the causes that might produce a dangerous landslide. The men were in danger all the time and it appears that there was no necessity for exposing them to such danger. By the simple and comparatively inexpensive expedient of putting in false cribbing, that danger could have been eliminated. The jury, therefore, were entitled to believe that the risk which culminated in the injury to plaintiff was not one of the natural and inherent risks of the business had it been conducted by defendants in a reasonably careful manner.

Passing to the issue of assumed risk, we find nothing in the facts and circumstances of the injury to support the contention that, as a matter of law, the risk was assumed by plaintiff as one of the natural hazards, of the service. It-would be an impossible task to attempt to *560reconcile the cases in this state that deal with the doctrine of assumed risk. However, the recent decisions of the Supreme Court and Courts of Appeal harmonize , with each other, though they are at variance with much that has been written in earlier decisions. The rule now may be considered as firmly established that risks which do not belong' to the employment when conducted by the, master with reasonable care, are not natural risks of such employment and where caused by the negligence of the master, they are not assumed by the servant for the simple reason that the servant could not, if he would, give the master a right to be negligent and the law will not imply a contract the parties could not establish by express agreement. In Jewell v. Kansas City Bolt & Nut Works, 132 S. W. l. c. 709, the Supreme Court quote with approval the following excerpt from the opinion in Mathis v. Stock Yards Co., 186 Mo. l. c. 447:

“And if the servant knows, or by the exercise of ordinary care could know, that the appliances furnished are not altogether or reasonably safe, the servant is not obliged to refuse to use the applicances or to quit the service of the master if he reasonably believes that by the exercise of proper care and caution he can safely use the appliances, notwithstanding they are not reasonably safe. And if he does use them, and exercises such care and caution, and is injured, the servant does not waive his right to compensation for injuries received in consequence unless guilty of contributory negligence; but, if the appliance is so obviously dangerous that it cannot safely be used with care and caution, or, as it is sometimes said, if the danger of using it is patent, or such as to threaten immediate injury, then the servant is guilty of contributory negligence if he uses it, and the. master is not liable, notwithstanding his prior failure of duty.”

That is wholesome doctrine and. means that where the risk is created by the negligence of the. master there *561is no room in the case for the application of the rule of assumed risk. Nor do we find any occasion for bolding that plaintiff’s injury was due to a risk incident to tbe employment of making safe an unsafe place. We held in Henson v. Packing Co., 113 Mo. App. 618, that “when tbe work in band is dangerous for tbe reason that it is to secure and make safe an unsafe place, tbe rule, as generally applied, that tbe master must furnish tbe servant a safe place in which to work, can baye no application. To say that a man can have a safe place to work in an unsafe place is an absurdity.”

That rule applies where a servant is sent to clear up a wreck, or to repair a defect and is given control over tbe method of doing tbe work. Such delegation of authority invests him with functions of the master, constitutes him a sort of vice-principal, and, being left free to control bis own actions, be cannot complain of tbe master if be is injured in consequence of, or in spite of, tbe very method be chooses.

But obviously that rule should not be applied where tbe servant in no wise represents tbe master and is work-’ ing under tbe direction and supervision of tbe master’s vice-principal. In making safe an unsafe place tbe master who retains control of tbe work and. demands obedience from bis servants must not enhance tbe natural dangers of tbe work by' bis own negligence. He still owes his servants tbe fundamental duty of exercising reasonable care for their safety. Tbe fact that tbe work is inherently more dangerous than other work does not relieve the master of such duty but calls for tbe adoption of a method suitable to the natural dangers and risks thereof. It would be monstrous to say that a master, with impunity, may.subject his servant to danger of death or serious injury where such danger may be obviated by the exercise of ordinary care and common humanity. ,

What we have just said is fully supported by tbe *562• opinion in the recent case of Corby v. Telephone Company, 132 S. W. Rep. l. c. 718. Speaking through Wood-son, J., the Supreme Court say:

“Nor would the master be liable for damages for injuries sustained by the so-called servant in consequence of the unsafe place furnished him in which to labor, where the servant is employed not only to repair the defects and make the place safe, but also to manage and control these repairs while they are being made, for the obvious reason that in such case the servant is employed because of his superior knowledge and experience in such matters, and, consequently, acts both for himself and the master, who presumably has no knowledge whatever upon the subject. But clearly that rule has no application to a servant who has no supervision or control over the work being done, especially where, as here, the work consisted of the dismantling and the reconstruction of one entire telephone plan in a large city, under the supervision of a general manager and numerous assistant managers. In all such cases, the general manager and his various assistants represent the master. In such case, clearly the servants and linemen who are serving under and obeying their superiors are not representing the master. Under the conditions of things disclosed by this record, the law nowhere clothed the plaintiff or any of his fellow linemen with authority to supervise ánd control the work in which they were engaged . . . and the telephone company owed them the same duty to inspect and furnish them with a reasonably safe place in which to work as all other masters owe to their servants in that regard.” Finally, as to the issue of contributory negligence, mere knowledge of the danger of working in a defective place will not defeat the action unless the danger was so glaring as- to threaten immediate injury. [Jewell v. K. C. Bolt & Nut Co., supra, and cases cited.]-

The evidence presents the issue of contributory negligence as one of fact for the jury to solve. The danger *563of landslides was present all the time, hut there is room in the evidence for a reasonable inference that an ordinarily careful and prudent person in the situation of plaintiff well might have believed that by using caution and vigilance he could prevent a serious landslide, or if one occurred, escape being injured by it.

The learned trial judge did not err in overruling the demurrer to the evidence. We find the instructions conform to the views expressed and that the record is free from prejudicial error.

The judgment is affirmed.

All concur.