Benton v. City of St. Louis

118 S.W. 418, 217 Mo. 687, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 31, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 418 (Benton v. City of St. Louis) 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
Benton v. City of St. Louis, 118 S.W. 418, 217 Mo. 687, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 301 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

LAMM, R. J.

Plaintiffs, father and mother of George Benton, an infant between six and seven years, sue for the wrongful death of George, drowned May 4, 1905, at a place in defendant city known as “Bruno avenue,” laying their damages at $5,000. At the close of their evidence, defendant asks an instruction in the nature of a demurrer. The trial, judge signifies his [692]*692intention to give it. Thereupon plaintiffs request permission to take a nonsuit with leave. Permission going, they take a nonsuit. In díie time they move to set it aside, and (their motion denied) they appeal.

The petition charges that Bruno avenue is a public street of defendant; that a duty lay upon defendant to keep it in safe condition; that at a certain point in said avenue there was for a long time a ‘‘ sink hole, surrounded with a large excavation, ditch or hole” about five feet deep and twelve feet in diameter and coming up flush with the edge of the north sidewalk on said avenue; that there was no rail on the sidewalk at the point and the boards of the walk were loose and insecure; that such dangerous and defective conditions were well known to defendant or could have become known to it by the exercise of ordinary care in time to have made repairs before the death of George, but that it failed and neglected to put the street and sidewalk in safe condition and that such negligence caused George’s death. That in walking upon the sidewalk in said street at said point in the afternoon of May 4, 1905, he stepped or fell from the sidewalk into said excavation and was drowned— the excavation being then filled with water up even with the surface of the sidewalk and water in said street.

The answer was a general denial.

There is (among minor questions raised) a main proposition in the case in a sharp issue on the question of fact of a street or no street at the locus.

Pacts vital to the disposition of material questions made on appeal will appear in connection with their determination.

I. If the sidewalk was on a public street there can be no doubt but what the charge of negligence was well made out and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the death of George. It was an [693]*693old, narrow, wooden sidewalk, the worse for wear and decay, built of boards nailed crosswise on stringers and, at the point in band, rested elevated on wooden posts several feet bigb. The boards, were loose, tbe sidewalk tipped sontb towards a bole running under it and tbence out in tbe street. This bole was- a large and deep affair. Tbe combination of bole, tipped sidewalk and loose boards shown by the evidence presents-an inflamed case of a negligently maintained and dangerous pitfall to adult or child. Not only so, but for a long time, in not unusual rains, the hole filled with water gathered by surface gutters and drainage, and this water arose even with the walk. There had been a heavy but' not unusual rainfall on May áth. The water gathered in the hole caused the sidewalk to float, that is, it (as a whole) seemed not fastened and anchored down securely. - George was of such tender age that contributory negligence could not be imputed to him as a matter of law. In fact there is no plea of "contributory negligence and none that his parents were guilty of negligence in -allowing him to be on the street at the time. It seems they had but moved into the neighborhood and knew nothing1 of the bad sidewalk or of the hole or of storm water usually accumulating there, nor did the child. A little bit before he was drowned, George had been seen busying himself placing planks, some distance away up street, for footmen-to cross Bruno avenue dryshod. He had on rubber boots and a striped cap. He was nest seen making his way on the sidewalk towards this hole — this, a very few minutes before the alarm was given. No human eye saw him drown. But a neighbor woman saw him going toward the spot immediately before. She had but turned to her household duties and, hearing a cry (a death cry, obviously) hurried out doors. On investigation, his cap was seen floating on the hole of water and his body was presently fished out by hooking a pole into one of his rubber boots. Some [694]*694witnesses describe tbe sidewalk as “wobbly” and “rickety” right close where his body lay. In this condition of proof the jury conld reasonably infer that the defects in the sidewalk hard by the treacherous pool caused him to slip or step off and drown. There was proof, too, that these defects were of long standing, so that the city could not claim it had neither actual nor constructive notice in time to remedy them. Hence the. demurrer cannot be upheld on the theory that plaintiffs made no case on the facts, if it be once further determined that the issue of fact of street or no street at the locus should have been put to the jury.

n. Plaintiff’s theory of the case is that the sidewalk is on a public street; contra, defendant insists it was on private ground and, hence, the city owed no duty to keep it safe. Such controversy (assuming facts already stated) seeks additional facts, vis.:

Bruno avenue runs east and west in the west part of the city. McCausland avenue, a public street, crosses it (with a slight jog) east of the locus. Blendon Place, another street," comes into it from the north a little ways west of the locus. With a jog, Blendon Place then runs on south. At an early date, not disclosed, the land in that region seems to have been platted into blocks of irregular dimensions, and ways were left open between them. At a time, not disclosed by the evidence, but many years ago, a street was dedicated by deed and' called Bruno avenue. The whole region was then an outlying country district apparently. Bruno avenue, as dedicated by deed, was thirty, feet wide. Ten ' feet off the south side of this deeded street were, many years ago, inclosed by the abutting proprietors by a permanent fence, as a part of their grounds and this fence has ever since been maintained to the exclusion of the public. A city plat or survey shows that a [695]*695strip of ground twenty feet wide lying north of and adjacent to the thirty-foot street, so dedicated, is marked as a “private road.” When this plat was made is dark, hut the paper private road antedates the oral evidence in the case which, in turn, covers a period of fifteen or twenty years next before the trial. Hard by and north of the private road is a strip of ground ten feet wide marked on the same city map or plat with the name “George W. Campbell.” In point of fact, however, these three strips so severally designated on paper as “private road,” as “Bruno avenue” and as “George W. Campbell” (barring said ten feet on the south taken in to a private inclosure), make on the earth’s surface a strip of ground fifty feet wide inclosed for fifteen or twenty years on the north and south by such permanent fences as commonly earmark a public road, and the whole strip is known in the neighborhood as Bruno avenue.- The record is dark as to whether the said ten feet on the south were vacated by legal steps. It is dark as to whether the original Bruno avenue was ever widened by legal steps on the north by taking in the private road and the Campbell strip. The next parallel streets, north and south of Bruno, are, severally, say, six hundred feet away. The distance from McCausland avenue to Blendon Place is, say, six hundred feet, but (while the abstract is not clear) it is not our understanding that Bruno avenue ends at McCausland on the east and Blendon Place on the west. It crosses said streets and runs on.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 418, 217 Mo. 687, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1909.