Kremer v. Eagle Manufacturing Co.
Kremer v. Eagle Manufacturing Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff was injured while in the employment of defendant and alleges that his injuries
On the date of the injury, March 14, 1905, defendant owned and was operating a factory in Kansas City, Kansas, for the making of agricultural implements, and plaintiff was the foreman of its foundry. The various activities of the business were conducted in a one-story building, 500 feet long by 80 feet wide, the long dimension being laid in an east and west direction. A row of wooden pillars for the support of the roof ran through the middle of the building the full length thereof. An aisle immediately north of this line of supports bisected the floor space and furnished a passageway from one end to the other. On either side of this aisle were located the different departments of manufacture. The foundry occupied the southeast corner and the woodworking department the southwest corner. Between them were two other departments.
Our concern is with the woodworking room, for it was there plaintiff was injured by tripping on a defective elevation in the floor. That room was 225 feet long by 40 feet wide. It was uninclosed on the north save by the line of pillars mentioned. On the south and west it was inclosed by outer walls of the building and on
At about eleven o’clock in the forenoon plaintiff found it necessary to go from the foundry to the wood shop to present a requisition to the foreman of that shop for some materials needed in the foundry. After leaving the foundry he passed westward along the'main aisle until he reached the east end of the wood shop. From this point an aisle extended southward to a door in the south wall. Plaintiff proceeded a few steps along this aisle looking for the foreman and, observing him sixty or eighty .feet to the west, turned westward and walked along an open passageway running in that direction. He walked at an ordinary gait, was looking towards the foreman whose attention he endeavored to attract, but noticed the way ahead of him appeared to be clear and unobstructed. He had walked westward perhaps fifteen feet when the toe of his advancing foot struck against and slipped under the end of a plank in the floor that had become loosened and was elevated above the surrounding surface. The result was a fall that fractured his knee cap. An examination of the place
Defendant contends that no negligence should be imputed to it under the facts in proof, because it does not appear that the defect existed for any length of time before the injury. The mere fact that a servant is injured in the discharge of his duties by a defect in the place provided for his use by the master, does not of itself raise an inference of negligence. The master is not an insurer of the safety of the servant and is only required to exercise reasonable care to discover the presence of defects and when discovered to employ reasonable diligence to repair them. The burden always is on the plaintiff in cases of this character to show affirmatively a negligent breach of the duty just stated as an indispensable element of the right to recover.
One of plaintiff’s witnesses had operated the machine immediately south of the defective place until a few days before plaintiff was injured. It is true he did not see plaintiff fall, and had none but hearsay knowl
The court in the instructions given submitted the issue of plaintiff’s negligence and the jury in the verdict returned found that he was in the exercise of due care when injured. Defendant says that in law plaintiff must be held guilty of contributory negligence for several reasons. First, knowing that the floor was uneven from wear and that it was constantly being used in the trucking of heavy loads, plaintiff had no right to assume that it was reasonably safe for his use but should have made vigilant use of his eyes to discover defects. Considering the substantial character of the floor which evidently was designed to be sufficient for the purposes of its intended use, we cannot say as a matter of law that the use of an apparently unobstructed passageway by a servant who found it necessary to walk from one part of the room to another was made more dangerous by the fact that loaded trucks had been moved over it. The effect such operations would have on a floor of such construction and the degree of caution to be observed by an ordinarily prudent man who knew
Plaintiff as foreman of the foundry was not chargeable with the duty of inspecting the floor of the wood shop and when in the course of business he found it necessary to enter that room had the right to assume that defendant had performed its obligation to him to exercise reasonable care to discover defects in the floor and to repair them, and that the passageway was in a reasonably safe condition for his use. True “he could not put his eyes in his pocket” and go blindly forward without giving any heed to his course. But when not confronted by any apparent danger, ordinarily prudent persons do not act with the vigilance and caution they employ to detect and avoid known or suspected dangers. To say that plaintiff should be pronounced, culpable in law because he admits he did not give close attention to the floor after observing that he had an apparently safe passageway, ahead of him, would be to require of him the same degree of vigilance he should have used had he known of the presence of defects in the way or had good reason to believe they existed.
Further, it is said plaintiff should have walked along the main aisle which was provided with a good smooth floor until he arrived at a point opposite to the position of the foreman, instead of entering the wood-shop at its east end. Plaintiff did not know in what part of the room he would find the foreman and it was a very natural thing for him to pass as quickly as he could from behind the obstruction to his view of the interior of the wood shop interposed by the line of wooden pillars. As we before observed, we cannot arbitrarily say that the passageway through the wood shop was inherently more dangerous than that offered by the main aisle,.
We have considered the criticisms made by defendant of the instructions given on behalf of plaintiff. Most of them have been answered sufficiently in the views expressed and for that reason do not call for special mention.' The others clearly are without merit. The case was fairly submitted and the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.