Beane v. St. Joseph and Inv. Co.

256 S.W. 1093, 215 Mo. App. 554, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 213
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 1093 (Beane v. St. Joseph and Inv. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beane v. St. Joseph and Inv. Co., 256 S.W. 1093, 215 Mo. App. 554, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 213 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*556 TRIMBLE, P. J.

Plaintiff, while walking south on the sidewalk along the west side of Fifth street between Francis and Felix streets in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri, fell and broke his hip by reason of an accumulation of ice which had formed thereon at a point adjacent to premises owned by the defendant Brittain Investment Company. He brought this suit for damages against the city .of St. Joseph and the said Investment Company, the adjacent property owner. The latter was made a party in obedience to the requirements of section 7954, Revised Statutes 1919, which provides that whenever the city is made liable to an action for damages by reason of the wrongful act, negligence, carelessness or unskillfulness of any person or corporation, and such person or corporation shall also be liable to an action on account thereof by the party- so injured, the latter, if he sues the city, shall also join such other person or corporation, if residing in this State, etc. In the case as originally brought, plaintiff obtained a judgment against both defendants which was appealed to this court; and on that appeal certain matters were disposed of adversely to appellant city’s contention but the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial as to both defendants. It developed in evidence on that trial that the premises of the property owner, at the time of the injury and prior thereto, had been in the possession of tenants; and there was evidence tending to show that the injury was caused by their negligence and not that of the owner. Consequently, plaintiff’s instruction was erroneous as to the property owner since it did not predicate the case upon proper facts necessary to make a case against it. If the injury arose because of the wrongful act of the tenants and not the property owner, then, as the tenants had not been made parties, necessarily the judgment had to be reversed as to the city also, for, without regard to any other consideration, Section 7954 had not been obeyed, and, by virtue of its terms, no judgment against the city could be permitted to stand when *557 matters were in that situation. So much may he said here in further explanation and defense of our action, on the former appeal, in reversing the judgment and remanding the cause as to both defendants. The decision on the former appeal is shown in Beane v. City of St. Joseph, 211 Mo. App. 200, 240 S. W. 840.

After the reversal and remanding of the cause as above stated, plaintiff filed an amended petition and also made the tenants parties defendant along with the city and the property owner. It developed in the evidence on the second trial, however, that under the terms of the lease, the property owner continued in possession of the premises as to the outside of the building during the tenancy and had bound itself in the lease to make repairs on the outside. Hence the trial court sustained a demurrer as to the tenants; but the case was submitted to the jury as to the city and the property owner. The jury returned a verdict against both of said defendants in the sum of $2500, and both defendants have again appealed.

The amended petition on which the trial was had, after alleging that plaintiff’s fall occurred on December 8, 1919, on the sidewalk at the point specified, adjacent to the premises of the defendant Investment Company, by reason of an accumulation of ice which had been permitted to form at said point, also charged that: “the building owned by defendant, The Brittain Investment Company, . . . was defectively constructed, in that the guttering, drains or downspouts on said building were insufficient or defective, so that they would not at all times carry off all of the water which accumulated on the roof *of said building, but permitted water to run from the roof of said building down the outside of a downspout on the east side thereof and run' across the sidewalk adjacent to said downspout, and said defendants maintained said building in said defective condition; that water-accumulated on the roof of said building because of its said defective condition was permitted to flow up *558 on, along and across the said sidewalk . . . adjacent to the said premises of defendant, The Brittain Investment Company, and permitted to freeze into thick ice on said sidewalk, and said ice was negligently permitted by defendants to remain on said' sidewalk and had thawed and melted and again frozen into rough and uneven ridges, forming a dangerous obstruction to persons attempting to 'walk along said sidewalk. ’ ’

It was' further alleged that said condition of said sidewalk had existed for a long time prior to December 8, 1919, and was known to defendants, or, in the exercise of ordinary care on their part would have been known by them,; that plaintiff, while in the exercise of ordinary i care, unfamiliar with said sidewalk and unacquainted with the fact that ice was upon said sidewalk, was, by reason of said ice, caused to fall and thereby sustained the injuries specified.

The property owner’s answer was a general denial, coupled with a plea of contributory negligence. The city’s answer contained the same matters together with a further plea that if an icy condition existed on the sidewalk at the time and place of the alleged injury, then it was caused by the wrongful act, negligence, etc., of its co-defendant.

The evidence is that at a distance variously estimated from twelve to twenty feet from the point on the sidewalk where plaintiff fell and received his injury a downspout on the building owned by the Brittain Investment Company'led from the roof thereof to the ground and was the means afforded for carrying the water from the roof of said building. This downspout continued on into the ground and ran underneath the surface thereof to and beneath the sidewalk and emptied into the city storm sewer. There is no dispute over the foregoing facts relating to the downspout and its connection with the sewer.

There was substantial evidence in plaintiff’s behalf that,-for a period of nineteen years, water from rainfall *559 or melting snow, in flowing from said roof, was not confined within said downpipe but flowed over the roof at the top of the pipe down the outside thereof, so that, instead of going harmlessly into the sewer, as it would have done had it flowed through the pipe, it came down the outside thereof and flowed over the surface of the ground in a somewhat diagonal direction to and across the sidewalk, thereby forming on said walk at the point in question a' stream of water across the sidewalk and spreading out like a fan. The result was that whenever there was rainfall followed by freezing weather, or water running from melting snow on the roof during which freezing temperature occurred, an icy condition was created on the sidewalk at that particular point. , During these times when water was thus flowing from the building across the sidewalk, it was manifest to the most ordinary mind that the moment the temperature fell to the freezing point, an icy condition would be created on the sidewalk at that point.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 1093, 215 Mo. App. 554, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beane-v-st-joseph-and-inv-co-moctapp-1923.