Barrett v. Town of Canton

93 S.W.2d 927, 338 Mo. 1082, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 23, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 93 S.W.2d 927 (Barrett v. Town of Canton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. Town of Canton, 93 S.W.2d 927, 338 Mo. 1082, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 423 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

COLLET, J.

Harry H. Barrett was injured on January 15, 1930, by falling upon a slippery sidewalk in the city of Canton. He brought this action against that city to recover damages in the sum of $20,000. The facts are as follows.

Mr. Barrett was editor and part owner of The Canton Press-News. He did much of his work at his home and ordinarily did not go to his office until afternoon. On the day he was injured he went to his office about three o’clock in the afternoon. Shortly before five p. m. he went from his office to the postoffice which was slightly more -than one block east and approximately one-half block south of his office. On January 8th or 9th an eight or nine inch snow fell in Canton and the surrounding territory. The tempeíature át the time of the snow was below freezing. Successive periods of freezing and thawing followed. There is evidence that at least one rain and some sleet fell after the snow and prior to plaintiff’s injury on the 15th. January 14th the weather became colder, plaintiff’s evidence indicating a *1085 maximum of about 30° above zero and a minimum about zero.- January 15th the maximum was about 22° and the minimum about 3° above zero. As a result of the freezing and thawing the streets and sidewalks were generally covered with ice. Some sidewalks had been cleaned, some others had been covered with ¡sawdust or cinders. The sidewalks which had not been cleaned were rough and. uneven. This was caused ¡by footprints of pedestrians. Plaintiff’s office was located on the south side of Clark Street which ran east and west. . The next street east of his office was Fifth Street and the next Fourth. The sidewalk on the south side of Clark Street from plaintiff’s office to Fifth ¡Street was concrete, nine feet wide. Approximately eight feet east of the Press-News building (plaintiff’s office) a driveway approximately nineteen feet wide had been constructed across the sidewalk from Clark Street and leading to a filling station which occupied the corner lot between the Press-News building and Fifth Street. The sidewalk from the Press-News building east to Fifth Street was covered with ice made very rough by indentations and ridges from two to five or six inches high. The driveway was fairly clean. In going to the postoffice plaintiff left his office, went east on the sidewalk to Fifth Street then instead of proceeding east on the sidewalk he walked in Clark Street to Fourth Street thence south to the postoffice. He explained that he walked in the street because he thought it safer. He stayed at the postoffice only a short time. Returning he took the same route. When he had progressed to a point (on the sidewalk) approximately three feet east of the east side of the driveway, which point was also approximately thirty feet east of the Press-News building, plaintiff slipped and fell and was seriously injured.

The case was tried in the Scotland-County Circuit Court. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant. The trial court sustained plaintiff’s motion for new trial assigning as grounds therefor error in defendant’s Instruction 3. From the order of the court sustainig the motion for new trial defendant appeals. Since the appeal was granted plaintiff died. On motion the cause was revived in the name of Jennie A. Barrett, administratrix. Respondent will be referred to hereafter as if there had been no substitution.

It is asserted by appellant that Instruction 3 was correct but that even if it was not, the cause should be reversed because respondent’s evidence failed to show facts which entitled him to recover and hence appellant’s demurrers offered at the close of respondent’s ease and again at the close of all the evidence should have been sustained. If the latter point is well taken it disposes of the appeal and will therefore be considered first.

Respondent testified that the walk where he fell was very rough with ridges of ice from four to six inches high and that it *1086 had been in this condition about three weeks. Other .witnesses for respondent stated that the-walk was .covered with ice; that it was very rough caused by footprints; ridges of ice formed from two to four or five inches -high and that this condition had existed for at least a week or more. Several witnesses, testified that the sidewalks in-front of their homes, .or places of business, had been cleaned off prior to the date-of respondent’s injury.- All of the testimony clearly showed that alternate periods of thawing, and freezing had followed the heavy snow.

We are asked to say, as a matter of law, that because the condition which existed at the place of respondent’s injury was of the same character which existed generally over, the city of Canton as a result of the general, snow and-the subsequent freezing and thawing, that there cap be no liability. Such a holding would necessarily result in excluding from consideration the question of whether a reasonable opportunity had been afforded the city to correct the situation and would result, in effect, in saying that if the condition complained of was of" the same kind and character as then existed or had existed generally over, the city,, there could be. no recovery regardless of how long the condition at this particular place had continued. We do not think that, is the law in this State, although the cases of Reedy v. St. Louis Brewing Assn., 161 Mo. 523, 61 S. W. 859, and Vonkey v. St. Louis, 219 Mo. 37, 117 S. W. 733, would seem to so hold. ' -

The general principle may be stated to be that a city is required to keep its streets and sidewalks in reasoably safe condition for the purposes for which they are designed and is liable to one who, while properly using the street, suffers injury in consequence of its dangerous condition provided the city had neglected a reasonable opportunity to remove the danger. That language is taken from the opinion in the Reedy case but that opinion continues with the assertion that ice or snow upon a sidewalk is a dangerous obstruction which is excepted from the category-of obstructions for' which the city is liable. It is upon the latter statement, which was later quoted with approval in Vonkey v. St. Louis, supra, that appellant’s contention is based. In discussing'this same question in the later case of Suttmoeller v. City of St. Louis (Mo.), 230 S. W. 67, this court said (l. c. 69):

“A municipality’s liability for injuries resulting from ice-covered walks is not predicated, however, on the ■ character of the ice -formation, but on its negligence in the premises". And the character of the formation, may, or may not, be the controlling element in determining the question of negligence in a particular case. . . . Whether in a given case a city can be said to" have been negligent may depend upon a great variety of circumstances, as, for example, the *1087 nature and extent of the ice ■ formation, the length of time it had previously existed, the conditions that prevailed generally during that time as to the presence, or absence, of snow and ice, the location of the walk, and its frequent, or infrequent, use by travelers.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 927, 338 Mo. 1082, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-town-of-canton-mo-1936.