Missouri Court of Appeals, 1909

Bartlett v. Helmbacher Forge & Rolling Mills Co.

Bartlett v. Helmbacher Forge & Rolling Mills Co.
Missouri Court of Appeals · Decided November 2, 1909 · Goode
143 Mo. App. 14; 122 S.W. 351; 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 294

Bartlett v. Helmbacher Forge & Rolling Mills Co.

Opinion of the Court

GOODE, J.

Guiseppi Pusateri, a Sicilian, was killed in defendant’s Iron Works on January 11, 1907, by the falling on him of a pile of iron bars. The bars were about thirty-six inches long, and the averment is they had been piled to an excessive and dangerous height, from ten to fifteen feet, unsupported in any way and insecure and liable from the great height and unsafe structure of the pile to collapse and fall. It was further averred the careless way in which the iron was piled, and the fact that the piles were dangerous and liable to fall, was well known to defendant, or could have been known to it by the exercise of ordinary care for the safety of its employees. Plaintiff was working on a low pile a foot or so from the one which toppled, over and killed him. This action was instituted by the administrator of his estate under the provisions of two statutes of the State of Illinois where deceased resided and the accident happened. The evidence for plaintiff tended to prove the piles were fifteen to eighteen feet high, and, in truth, one witness for plaintiff swore the one which fell was thirty feet high. The evidence tended also to show the piles were negligently and insecurely stacked and liable to fall in consequence of the vibrations of trains passing near the foundry.

Plaintiff had a verdict which the court set aside, granting a new trial on the ground the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. This appeal was prosecuted from the order for new trial, the contention being there was no substantial conflict in the evidence on any point affecting the merits of the case. We have read the evidence in regard to plaintiff’s contention and find it untenable. There was a sharp conflict of testimony as to the height of the pile which fell, some saying it was not more than four or five feet high; also as to whether it had been piled straight and was perpendicular at the time it fell, or had been piled slantingly and out of plumb. There can be no question that a conflict of evidence occurred on material *17issues of the case, and therefore the action of the court in granting a new trial because the verdict ivas against the weight of the evidence cannot be set aside.

The order for new trial is affirmed and the cause remanded.

All concur.

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