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Thomas v. Sash Door Co.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Court en Banc
Feb 11, 1929
14 S.W.2d 1 (Mo. 1929)

Opinion

February 11, 1929.

1. NEGLIGENCE: Circular Saw: Oiling Bearings: Vice-Principal: Knowledge of Impending Danger. The defendant operated a plant for the manufacture of woodwork. In the plant were a number of rip-saws operated by belting, and plaintiff was employed to operate one of the saws. The vice-principal had given him a general order to oil the bearings at 12:40 o'clook each day, at which time the saws were regularly stopped. The saw ran in a slot in a steel table, and was attached to a steel shaft which ran under the table through three bearings, and power was transmitted to the shaft by belting attached to an overhead shaft. To oil the bearings it was necessary to reach through the belting. Just after 12:40, when the saw had stopped and the belting was motionless, plaintiff raised the table top of the saw and began to oil the bearings, in the ordinary manner, which was a perfectly safe work if done while the belting was motionless. The vice-principal, who stood within five or six feet and whose view was unobstructed, pulled the starting lever and set the machinery in motion, without warning, and thus plaintiff's arm was torn off. Held, that the vice-principal must be held to have known, at the time he turned on the power and started the saw in motion, that plaintiff, in the proper discharge of his duties, would be oiling the bearings, and his act cannot be construed otherwise than as negligence; and his negligence in starting the machinery, without warning, was the negligence of the defendant, and the trial court erred in forcing plaintiff to take an involuntary nonsuit.

2. ____: Vice-Principal: Orders to Employee. Where the general foreman brought plaintiff to an employee who operated a cut-off saw, which was operated about eight feet from the rip-saw to be operated by plaintiff, and told him that plaintiff was assigned to work on the rip-saw and said to him, "Here is a ripper for you; show him what you want him to do," and then said to plaintiff. "You will get your orders from him; do as he tells you," and the cut-off sawyer told plaintiff to oil the main bearings each day after the whistle blew at twelve-forty, and for six weeks thereafter gave to plaintiff all his orders for the work he was to do and passed on the quality of his work, the cut-off sawyer and plaintiff, who was injured while oiling the bearings just after the whistle blew, by the negligent starting of the machinery by the cut-off sawyer, were not fellow-servants, but the cut-off sawyer was a vice-principal as to plaintiff.

3. ____: ____: Dual Capacity. The fact that an employee is for certain purposes a vice-principal and for others a fellow-servant, and that he receives his orders directly from the general foreman, does not alter the fact that as to plaintiff he may be a vice-principal. If the employee is authorized by his employer to give orders to another employee and to direct him as to the manner in which he is to perform his work, and gives such orders and regulates the manner of performance, he is, as to such other employee, a vice-principal.

4. ____: ____: ____: Directions and Control. An employee who is given authority to direct and control other employees in a branch of his employer's business, whether the authority comes directly from his employer or from the general foreman, is not a fellow-servant with the others, but a vice-principal as to them, and for his negligent acts his employer is liable.

5. ____: ____: ____: Giving Orders. An employee who gives orders to other employees in pursuance to authority conferred upon him by his employer is not a fellow-servant as to them while they are engaged in the performance of his orders, but a vice-principal.

6. ____: ____: Power to Furnish Safe Place. A vice-principal is charged with the duty to exercise ordinary care to afford an employee under his control and supervision a reasonably safe place to work and to warn him of impending danger. The vice-principal having received authority to give orders to the employee as to the manner of performing his work, and the employee having been directed to obey such orders, the vice-principal's control and supervision over the employee are not confined to a mere coordination of their work.

7. ____: ____: ____: Non-Delegable Duty. The vice-principal being clothed with authority by defendant to give to an employee orders as to all phases of his work, and the evidence showing that the authority was exercised, the non-delegable duty of the defendant to furnish the employee a safe place to work and to warn him of impending danger devolved upon such vice-principal, and his negligence in creating the danger to the employee was the negligence of defendant.

Corpus Juris-Cyc. References: Master and Servant, 39 C.J., Section 691, p. 574, n. 54; Section 717, p. 604, n. 80; Section 743, p. 634, n. 89; Section 746, p. 636, n. 14; Section 1284, p. 1092, n. 43.

Appeal from Jackson Circuit Court. — Hon. Willard P. Hall, Judge.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

J.C. Stanton, C.R. Leslie and Hogsett Boyle for appellant.

The circuit court erred in sustaining the defendant's demurrer to plaintiff's evidence. (1) Barnickel's negligence was clearly established, and is conceded by the respondent. (2) Barnickel was a vice-principal, with authority from defendant to give plaintiff orders as to all phases of plaintiff's work. Johnson v. American Car Foundry Co. (Mo.), 259 S.W. 442, 444; State ex rel. Duvall v. Ellison, 283 Mo. 541; Freese v. Rogers-Schmitt Wire Iron Co., 274 S.W. 779; McCall v. Dry Goods Co. (Mo.), 236 S.W. 326; Morin v. Rainey, 207 S.W. 860; Comiskey v. Heating Co., 219 S.W. 999; Bradshaw v. Standard Oil Co., 199 Mo. App. 688. The mere fact that Barnickel did not wear the nominal title of "foreman" is unimportant. He had authority to control plaintiff and was a vice-principal, regardless of his title. Freese v. Iron Co. (Mo.), 274 S.W. 778; Dayharsh v. Ry. Co., 103 Mo. 575; Miller v. Railroad, 109 Mo. 356; Comiskey v. Heating Co., 219 S.W. 999. (3) The non-delegable duties of the master to furnish a safe place and to give warning of danger devolved upon Barnickel, and fell within the scope of his authority as vice-principal. When once Barnickel's status as vice-principal was established, then Barnickel as a matter of law became charged with the duty to exercise ordinary care for plaintiff's safety. Johnson v. American Car Co. (Mo.), 259 S.W. 444; Freese v. Rogers-Schmitt Wire Iron Co. (Mo.), 274 S.W. 779; Dayharsh v. Ry. Co., 103 Mo. 576; Cook v. Cement Co., 214 Mo. App. 607; State ex rel. Duvall v. Ellison, 283 Mo. 532; Strother v. Milling Co., 261 Mo. 16; McCall v. Dry Goods Co. (Mo.), 236 S.W. 326; McCauley v. Brewing Assn., 254 S.W. 870; Fogarty v. Transfer Co., 180 Mo. 512; Funk v. Iron Works Co., 277 S.W. 570; Morin v. Rainey, 207 S.W. 860; Acebedo v. Foundry Co., 291 S.W. 505; House v. Car Co., 270 S.W. 137; Comiskey v. Heating Co., 219 S.W. 999; Bradshaw v. Oil Co., 199 Mo. App. 688; Gibbs v. Duvall, 201 S.W. 606; Bennett v. Hood, 296 S.W. 1028; Bien v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 412; Hancox v. Craddock, 229 S.W. 271; Mertz v. Rope Co., 174 Mo. App. 94. Barnickel's authority over plaintiff was not confined to "coordinating their work," but was general in its scope. Barnickel did in fact have authority to give plaintiff orders "respecting the oiling of the saw." But plaintiff's case does not depend on the question whether Barnickel had such authority, because certainly the general foreman, Kimes, had such authority and did give plaintiff such orders; and Barnickel's status as vice-principal would not be destroyed by his alleged lack of authority to give orders of that particular kind. (4) Barnickel's negligence was a breach of his duty as vice-principal to exercise ordinary care to keep plaintiff's place of work reasonably safe. Johnson v. American Car Co. (Mo.), 259 S.W. 442; Bender v. Kroger Grocery Co., 276 S.W. 407; Dayharsh v. Railway Co., 103 Mo. 575; State ex rel. Duvall v. Ellison, 283 Mo. 532; Strother v. Milling Co., 261 Mo. 16; Freese v. Wire Co. (Mo.), 274 S.W. 779; Dreesen v. Nat. Building Material Co., 5 S.W.2d 1; Morin v. Rainey, 207 S.W. 858; Acebedo v. American Car Co., 291 S.W. 505; Cook v. Cement Co., 214 Mo. App. 596; House v. Car Co., 270 S.W. 135: Comiskey v. Heating Co., 219 S.W. 1000; Bradshaw v. Standard Oil Co., 199 Mo. App. 688; McCall v. Dry Goods Co., 236 S.W. 326; McCauley v. Brewing Assn., 254 S.W. 870; Gibbs v. Duvall, 201 S.W. 606; Bennett v. Hood, 296 S.W. 1028; Bien v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 412; Hancox v. Craddock, 229 S.W. 271; Mertz v. Rope Co., 174 Mo. App. 94. (5) Barnickel's negligence was also a breach of his duty, as vice-principal, to warn plaintiff of danger. State ex rel. Duvall v. Ellison, 283 Mo. 545; Morin v. Rainey, 207 S.W. 861; Mertz v. Rope Co., 174 Mo. App. 94; Cook v. Cement Co., 214 Mo. 1027 Mo. App. 607; Landcaster v. Stamping Co., 1 S.W.2d 240; Simmons v. Bakery Co., 6 S.W.2d 1023. (6) Barnickel's act in starting the machinery was incidental to his duties as vice-principal; because it was only by reason of Barnickel being a vice-principal that he had any right to interfere with plaintiff's saw. Fogarty v. Transfer Co., 180 Mo. 512; Strother v. Milling Co., 261 Mo. 16; Johnson v. American Car Co., 259 S.W. 442; Bien v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 399; Edge v. Railway, 206 Mo. 471; Hollweg v. Tel. Co., 195 Mo. 149; Russ v. Railway, 112 Mo. 45; Doss v. Railway, 135 Mo. App. 643. (7) The divisional opinion is unsupported by any authority. No case in Missouri has ever held it not to be within the scope of the authority of a conceded vice-principal to keep the place of work of inferior servants reasonably safe. The divisional opinion stands alone in so holding.

A.L. Berger and Morrison, Nugent, Wylder Berger for respondent; Homer H. Berger, H.L. Hassler and Delos C. Johns of counsel.

The court committed no error in sustaining defendant's demurrer to plaintiff's evidence at the close of plaintiff's case. (1) No negligence or liability of the defendant can be predicated upon the general standing order of foreman Kimes to oil the saw twice daily. Such order was not negligent and was not the proximate cause of the injury. 39 C.J. 483, sec. 597; English v. Shoe Co., 145 Mo. App. 439; Kalinski v. Coal Co., 263 Ill. 257; 4 Labatt's Master Servant (2 Ed.) sec. 1361, p. 3919, and Sec. 1362, p. 3924; King v. Coal Co., 158 Ill. App. 351; Linderman Box Co. v. Thompson, 127 Ill. App. 134; Stephens v. Lumber Co., 110 Mo. App. 398. (2) Barnickel was not a foreman, superior servant or vice-principal, so as to charge defendant for Barnickel's act injuring the plaintiff. No duties of the master were delegated to or assumed by Barnickel, and the act of Barnickel which injured the plaintiff was not committed in performing some duty the master owed to the servant, but in doing an act of fellow-service. (a) Barnickel did not have authority to give plaintiff instruction as to all phases of plaintiff's work. Boston v. Kroger Co., 7 S.W.2d 1006; Burge v. American Car Co., 274 S.W. 842. (b) No duty devolved upon Barnickel to furnish plaintiff a safe place to work or to give warning of danger. No such duty was delegated to him or fell within the scope of his authority. 39 C.J. 593, sec. 712; Beresford v. Coal Co., 124 Iowa 34; Wuellner v. Planing Mill Co., 303 Mo. 38; Hawk v. Lumber Co., 166 Mo. 121; English v. Rand Shoe Co., 145 Mo. App. 439; Kinser v. Paint Co., 249 S.W. 447; Fink v. Iron Works, 311 Mo. 77; Rodgers v. Schiele, 148 Mo. App. 53; Morin v. Rainey, 207 S.W. 858; Stephens v. Lumber Co., 110 Mo. App. 398; Clark v. Wheelock, 293 S.W. 456; Chrismer v. Bell Tel. Co., 194 Mo. 212; Ring v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 112 Mo. 231; Nugent v. Milling Co., 131 Mo. 256; Brady v. Railroad, 206 Mo. 527; Hearow v. Lumber Co., 206 Mo. App. 468; Hawk v. Lumber Co., 166 Mo. 121. (c) Barnickel's act in starting plaintiff's rip-saw was not incidental to any duty as a vice-principal, but was incidental to their common employment as fellow-servants. (3) There is no jury question in this case, where the necessary facts for determining the question of common employment are undisputed; the question is simply for the court. Marshall v. Schrickler, 63 Mo. 311; Bradley v. Tea Co., 213 Mo. 320; Roe v. United Rys. Co., 211 Mo. App. 526; McIntyre v. Tebbetts, 257 Mo. 117; Hawk v. McLeod, 166 Mo. 121; Shaw v. Bambrick-Bates Cons. Co., 102 Mo. App. 666; Wuellner v. Planing Mill Co., 303 Mo. 38; Radtke v. Basket Box Co., 229 Mo. 24; Ryan v. Christian Board of Publication, 199 S.W. 1031; Boston v. Kroger Co., 7 S.W.2d 1006.


This case comes to me upon reassignment after a rehearing in the Court en Banc. It is an action for personal injuries brought by a servant against a master. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence, and after the usual procedure the plaintiff appealed.

The defendant operated a plant for the manufacture of woodwork in Kansas City. In this plant there are a number of rip-saws, operated by belting and pulleys. Plaintiff was a laborer employed by defendant to operate one of these saws. His right arm was torn off by the starting of the saw, through the alleged negligence of one Nick Barnickel, another employee, who prematurely turned on the power and started the saw without warning while the plaintiff was in the act of oiling the same as a part of his necessary duties in complying with the orders of the general foreman and of Barnickel. The negligence of the latter was conceded by the defendant when the case was heard in Division One of this court as is disclosed by the record.

The saw in question was known as number 1 rip-saw. It was about two feet from the east wall of the work-room. The saw was on a steel table, about four feet square and three feet high. Power was transmitted to the saw by belting and pulleys from an overhead shaft. The saw itself, that is the cutting disk, was circular in shape and operated in a slot in the surface of the steel table, and was set in motion or stopped by throwing a near-by lever extending down from the ceiling. The saw was attached to a steel shaft which ran east and west under the surface of the table, through three bearings. These bearings had to be oiled. In order to oil two of them it was necessary to reach through the belting on the east side of the saw. At such times the saw would be stopped and the belting would be motionless. It was plaintiff's duty to do this oiling, a duty necessary to the efficient operation of all machinery. He had been ordered to do it twice a day, once upon beginning work in the morning and again upon the commencement of work after the noon hour.

The injury occurred just after the 12:40 o'clock whistle had blown following the noon hour, while plaintiff was in the act of oiling the bearings of the saw. Plaintiff had raised the table top of his saw in the usual way, and had oiled the west one of the three main bearings. He then went around to the east side of the table and extended his right hand through the belting to reach the center bearing with the oil can. In order to oil the center bearing it was necessary to reach through the belting. Plaintiff was performing this task in the ordinary manner in which he usually did it and as other rip-saw operators did it. His arm, while he was thus engaged, was in a position of perfect safety so long as the saw was stationary, but in a position of the gravest danger if it was set in motion. While plaintiff was thus situated and within the sight of Barnickel, the latter pulled the starting lever and set the machinery in motion without warning and tore off plaintiff's right arm.

I. The concession of Barnickel's negligence by the defendant is an inescapable conclusion, based upon the facts. Barnickel, whose relation to the plaintiff was that of a Negligence of vice-principal, as we will presently discuss, Vice-Principal. had given the plaintiff a general order to oil the main bearings of the saw at 12:40 o'clock each day. The injury occurred within a few minutes of 12:40 o'clock. Barnickel knew, or he must be held to have known that at the time he turned on the power and started the saw in motion that the plaintiff, in the proper discharge of his duties, would be oiling the machine. Barnickel, at the time of the injury was standing within five or six feet of the plaintiff. It was midday or, as the witnesses put it, "broad daylight." There were no obstructions between Barnickel and the plaintiff while the latter was oiling the saw, to prevent the former from seeing the plaintiff and realizing his danger from turning on the power. As a minor incident, confirmatory of Barnickel's knowledge of the situation or his opportunity for obtaining such knowledge, it appears that the table top of the saw was turned up. This circumstance carried with it notice to Barnickel that the plaintiff was oiling the saw in compliance with the orders of the appellant. Possessed of this knowledge Barnickel's act in turning on the power and starting the saw cannot be construed as other than negligence.

Other facts disclosed by the testimony might be stated to sustain this conclusion but, such is the probative force of those set forth that the statement of others is not deemed necessary.

II. The remaining question, a proper determination of which will settle this controversy, is whether Barnickel's negligence was that of a vice-principal or of a fellow servant. Barnickel was the operator of a cut-off saw, which was located about eight feet north of the rip-saw, operated by the plaintiff. Vice-Principal: About six weeks before the injury, the plaintiff Dual Capacity. was assigned by the general foreman, named Kimes, to work on the rip-saw. The circumstances under which this assignment was made are thus testified to in effect by the plaintiff: "He" (Kimes) "took me over to number 1 cut-off saw," where Barnickel worked, "and said to Nick" (Barnickel), "`Here's a ripper for you. Show him what you want him to do;' then he said to me, `You will get your orders from Nick.'" A literal transcription of plaintiff's further testimony concerning the character of Barnickel's relation to him is as follows:

"Q. Now, did you get any orders at that time from Nick Barnickel, any general orders about the work? A. Well, he just told me about oiling the saw right to start with.

"Q. He said to oil the saw twice a day? A. He said to oil the saw twice a day, oil the whole saw of a morning just after seven o'clock, and just after the whistle blew at twelve-forty to oil the main bearings of the saw."

"THE COURT: Now, who told you this? A. Nick Barnickel, the cut-off sawyer.

"Q. Now, Mr. Thomas, did you get many other orders from Nick Barnickel during the progress of your work as an employee there on number 1 rip-saw? A. Yes, I got all my orders for the work.

"Q. Well, tell what they were. A. He would tell me of the size and kinds of ripping done, what he wanted, and also told me the quantity, and he would direct me as to piling the lumber, sometimes tell me about rush orders, to hurry up and rush this and rush that, that he wanted it right away, and he would frequently send me away from the saw, for me to go to some other part of the plant or something, or do some work, and he would operate my saw while I was gone.

"Q. Was there ever anything about the quality of the lumber? A. Well, yes, he would pass on the quality of it, after I ripped. I would rip the lumber, as he asked it, would come up to him and he would pass on it. If it was satisfactory it would go on through, if it wasn't he would send it back to me and tell me to get out another one.

"Q. Did you give him any orders? A. No, I had no occasion to.

"Q. Did you always obey his orders? A. Certainly.

"Q. Did you get orders from anybody else? A. No, I got all my orders from Nick."

Other witnesses who were at the time employees of the defendant in the same department as the plaintiff, corroborated his testimony as to Barnickel's authority, conferred by the defendant and exercised by him, over said employees.

The theory upon which this case was brought, as disclosed by the petition, is that Barnickel was a vice-principal and as such invested with authority to direct the manner and order the performance of plaintiff's work. The testimony demonstrates the correctness of this theory and sustains the conclusion that the status of Barnickel was that of a vice-principal.

The contention as to the dual capacity of Barnickel in that he was for certain purposes a vice-principal and for others a fellow-servant, if true, does not militate against the correctness of the conclusion, under the facts, that so far as his relation to the plaintiff was concerned he was a vice-principal. Barnickel, pursuant to the authority conferred upon him by the defendant, not only regulated but ordered the manner in which the plaintiff was to perform his work. These orders, necessary to the performance of effective work, extended even to the time and manner in which plaintiff was to oil the bearings of the saw before operating the same. This, as Judge RAGLAND says in Dreessen v. Natl. Bldg. Material Co., 319 Mo. 1010, 5 S.W.2d 1, constituted him a vice-principal; or as was said by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Daggett v. American Car Fndry. Co., 284 S.W. l.c. 856, "Where a servant is given authority to direct and control other servants in a branch of the master's business, he is not a fellow-servant with the others, but is a vice-principal for whose negligent act the master must respond." [Citing many cases.]

The recent case of Doody v. California Woolen Mills Co., 216 S.W. (Mo.) 531, reviews the question as to what constitutes a vice-principal under facts similar to those in the case at bar, and holds that an employee giving orders to another under the authority of the master was not a fellow-servant but a vice-principal.

To a like effect is the case of Burkard v. Leschen Sons Rope Co., 217 Mo. l.c. 466 and cases, cited and reviewed. Another case of a like import and equally decisive is Johnson v. Amer. Car Fndry Co., 259 S.W. 442, in which the writer had occasion to review and discuss the matter under consideration and said:

"If we consider the testimony of defendant's witnesses alone, and interpret the same in the light of all of the other facts in the case, we encounter no difficulty in concluding that Harrison was not, as contended by the defendant, to be regarded as a fellow-servant of the plaintiff. While working together, the plaintiff was under Harrison's orders, so far as the conduct of the particular work in which they were employed at the time of the injury was concerned. If one servant is given authority to direct and control other servants in a certain branch of the master's business he is not a fellow-servant with the others. [State ex rel. Duval v. Ellison, 285 Mo. l.c. 541, 223 S.W. 651 and cases; Montgomery v. Payne (Mo. App.), 228 S.W. 842; Loretta v. Columbia Can Co. (Mo. App.), 246 S.W. 997.]"

The question received a terse and decisive determination in Freese v. Rogers-Schmitt Wire Iron Co., 274 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 779, as follows:

"Where the master gives to a person power to superintend, control and direct the men engaged in the performance of work, such person is as to the men under him a vice-principal, and it can make no difference whether he is called a superintendent, conductor, boss or foreman, (BLACK, J., in Miller v. Railroad, 109 Mo. 350, 356, 19 S.W. 58, 59, 32 Amer. St. Rep. 673."

The rule announced in these cases is of course elementary and they are cited to show that the conclusions reached therein are based upon a like state of facts to those in the instant case. From all of which it is established by parity of reasoning that the status of Barnickel was that of a vice-principal.

III. It is contended, however, notwithstanding that status, it was not within the scope of Barnickel's authority to furnish the plaintiff with a safe place in which to work or to warn him of impending danger. The soundness of this contention, Duty to either in reason or upon a precedent, is subject to Furnish serious question. Barnickel's status as a Safe Place. vice-principal having been established he became charged with the duty to exercise ordinary care to afford the plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work and to warn him of impending danger. It will not do to say that Barnickel's control and supervision over plaintiff, as exercised, were confined to co-ordinating their work. This is too narrow a construction of the evidence. Barnickel's authority was not so limited. When the general foreman, Kimes, put plaintiff to work under Barnickel he said to the latter: "Here's a ripper for you; show him what you want him to do," and to plaintiff: "You will get your orders from Nick. Do as Nick tells you." This was no limited grant of authority to give orders only as to "co-ordination of the work," but was an unqualified grant of authority to give orders generally — not merely some orders — but all the orders that plaintiff was to receive. The evidence further shows that during the progress of the work plaintiff got all of his orders for the work from Barnickel, and from no one else. In the light of that evidence it may not reasonably be said that Barnickel's authority can be pared down to merely controlling the plaintiff in the "co-ordination of the work." When the defendant entrusted Barnickel with the responsibility of controlling the plaintiff in the performance of his work, the defendant thereby delegated to Barnickel, automatically and as a matter of law, the duty to exercise ordinary care to keep plaintiff's place of work reasonably safe.

In Johnson v. Amer. Car Fndry. Co., supra, having demonstrated that one Harrison was a vice-principal over the plaintiff, we held:

"By virtue, therefore, of the authority conferred upon and exercised by Harrison, his acts became, in law, those of the master, whose duty it was to exercise ordinary care to see that the method in which the work was being performed did not render the place of its performance unsafe to the plaintiff. [Dayharsh v. Ry. Co., 103 Mo. l.c. 576, 15 S.W. 554, 23 Am. St. 900.]"

And in Freese v. Rogers-Schmitt Wire Iron Co., supra, Judge RAGLAND quotes with approval the following language from the opinion of Judge BLACK in Miller v. Railroad, 109 Mo. l.c. 357:

"It is one of the absolute duties of the master to use ordinary care to avoid exposing the servant to extraordinary risks; and it is also the duty of the master to use ordinary care and diligence to provide the servant a safe place at which to work. The master, by appointing a foreman or other person to superintend work, with power to direct the men under him, when and how to do it, thereby devolves upon such person the performance of those duties personal to the master."

The similarity of the facts in the Miller case to those in the case at bar is as nearly identical as cases can well be.

In Bender v. Kroeger Grocery Co., 310 Mo. 488, 496, 276 S.W. l.c. 407-408, the plaintiff entered a trailer to unload it, and while so doing he was injured through the negligence of the driver of the truck, in detaching the trailer from the truck. The fellow-servant rule was held inapplicable, on the ground that negligence was a breach of the master's non-delegable duty to keep plaintiff's place of work reasonably safe. In speaking for the court Judge BLAIR said:

"In this case the plaintiff was directed to enter the trailer and remove the empty bread trays. Such trailer was his place of work at the time, and the duty of the defendant to exercise ordinary care to keep such place reasonably safe while plaintiff was engaged in working therein at once attached, and that duty was a non-delegable one. In directing Rufgardner to detach the tractor and move it away from the trailer, it was the duty of defendant to see that Rufgardner did not perform his work negligently. He performed that act, which affected the security of the place wherein plaintiff was instructed to work, in a negligent manner. For that negligence defendant was liable, regardless of whether or not Rufgardner was ordinarily a fellow servant of the plaintiff."

From all of which the well-established rule that the non-delegable duties of the master to furnish the plaintiff a safe place to work and to give him warning of an impending danger, devolved upon Barnickel as within the scope of his duty as a vice-principal.

A like rule as to the extent of a vice-principal's authority may be found in the following cases: Dayharsh v. Hannibal, etc., Ry. Co., 103 Mo. l.c. 576; Cook v. Atlantic Portland Cement Co., 214 Mo. App. l.c. 607; State ex rel. Duvall v. Ellison, 283 Mo. l.c. 542; Strother v. Milling Co., 261 Mo. l.c. 16.

IV. The defendant contends that there is no evidence that Barnickel ever gave the plaintiff an order concerning the oiling of the saw and hence that this duty cannot be included either in the power conferred on Barnickel by the defendant or Evidence exercised by him over the plaintiff. Without that Orders burdening this opinion with reasons to sustain the Were Given. conclusion that an order to oil the saw was within the purview of the vice-principal's powers and a part of the plaintiff's duties, it will suffice to say that the uncontradicted testimony of the plaintiff in that regard is as follows:

"He" (Barnickel) "said to oil the saw twice a day, to oil the whole saw of a morning just after seven o'clock, and just after the whistle blew at twelve-forty to oil the main bearings of the saw."

Not only was the order to oil the saw given to the plaintiff by Barnickel but a like order was given to the plaintiff by the general foreman as is shown by the following testimony of the plaintiff: "Well, after he" (Kimes) "told me about operating the saw and that I would get my orders from Nick" (Barnickel) "he said: `Always oil the saw of a morning and just after the whistle blows at twelve-forty.'"

Whatever merit there may be in the defendant's contention in this regard under a different state of facts, it is wholly lacking in this case in the light of the foregoing testimony.

V. Barnickel was a vice-principal. As such he was clothed with power by the defendant to give to the plaintiff orders as to all phases of the latter's work. The non-delegable duty, Conclusion. therefore, of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff with a safe place to work and to warn him of impending danger devolved upon Barnickel and his negligence as vice-principal was that of the defendant. It was clearly the scope of his authority to start the machinery. Without this power he could have exercised no such control over the plaintiff and the other employees as that shown to have been exercised by him. The evidence is ample to sustain the conclusion that he was indifferent to or regardless of the result of his act in starting the machinery or, in short, negligent. For this negligence the defendant must be held answerable.

The action of the trial court, therefore, in sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff's evidence and in compelling the plaintiff to take an involuntary nonsuit is reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial. All concur, except Ragland and Blair, JJ., who dissent.


Summaries of

Thomas v. Sash Door Co.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Court en Banc
Feb 11, 1929
14 S.W.2d 1 (Mo. 1929)
Case details for

Thomas v. Sash Door Co.

Case Details

Full title:HERMAN P. THOMAS, Appellant, v. AMERICAN SASH DOOR COMPANY

Court:Supreme Court of Missouri, Court en Banc

Date published: Feb 11, 1929

Citations

14 S.W.2d 1 (Mo. 1929)
14 S.W.2d 1

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Anderson v. Davis, 284 S.W. 453. (d) While plaintiff was going upon the table in obedience to a specific…

Hansen v. Ritter

Fellow servants do not include "vice-principals," those to whom a "master gives . . . [the] power to…