Biermann v. City of St. Louis

25 S.W. 369, 120 Mo. 457, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 369 (Biermann 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
Biermann v. City of St. Louis, 25 S.W. 369, 120 Mo. 457, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 138 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

G-antt, P. J.

This is an action for personal injuries, originally commenced before a justice of the peace in the city of St. Louis. The amended state[459]*459ment, on which the trial was had, avers that the city is a municipal corporation charged by law with the duty of keeping its streets and sidewalks in such repair and so free from defects, obstructions and nuisances as to cause them to be reasonably safe, for persons using ordinary care, to travel thereon; that Third street is a street in said city; that on the west side of said Third street, between Locust and Vine streets, there is a sidewalk, and on said sidewalk and at or nearly in front of house number 409 north in said Third street, there is a perpendicular rise or step nearly six inches high, extending across the whole width of said sidewalk, rendering said sidewalk uneven, defective and unsafe for persons' to travel thereon; that on the night of the thirtieth of May, 1891, about the hour of 10 o’clopk p. m., plaintiff while traveling on said Third street, stumbled and fell over said rise, through being tripped by said rise, and sustained great injury to his person; that said rise caused said sidewalk to be dangerous and had existed for many months prior to plaintiff’s injury; that defendant city well knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that said rise was in said sidewalk and rendered it dangerous and unsafe for persons to walk thereon, but negligently suffered and permitted it to remain in such unsafe condition, without causing any light or notice or guard to be placed thereat to warn travelers of said rise; that by reason of said fall plaintiff broke the cap of his left knee, bruised and injured his left side and sustained other hurts, which confined him to his bed six weeks and caused him to expend money for medicine and medical aid, to his damage in the sum of $300.

Plaintiff recovered in the justice’s court, and defendant appealed to the circuit court, where, upon a trial de novo, he again recovered judgment for $250, from which the city appeals to this' court.

[460]*460I. It is first insisted, by the city that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove that on the thirtieth day of May, 1891, he had gone to Jefferson Barracks to observe Decoration Day; that he was the flag bearer of his post on that occasion; that they returned to the city on the steamer “Oliver Bieme,” and reached the landing about half past 9 o’clock that night; that with his companions they were going north to their quarters to leave the flag, marching north on Third street; then when he was passing along on the west side of said street on the sidewalk nearly opposite the building number 409, North Third street, he struck a perpendicular rise in the sidewalk about five and one-half inches higher than the level of the walk, and fell and severely injured his knee cap and elbow; the walk was made of stone or asphaltum; that he was confined to his bed six or seven weeks, and was still lame and unable to work; that he was a carpenter by trade and made from $2.50 to $3 per day; that he had been unable to work since; that he had spent $5 or $6 for medicines; that there was no light or guard at the place where he fell; that there was an electric light in the neighborhood “but he didn’t believe it was lit;” that he did not know of this sudden rise in the walk; that he had not walked on that portion of the street for six or eight years. He didn’t see the rise; denied that he was careless in walking along the street.

Thomas H. Macklind, a district - engineer in the street commissioner’s department, testified he was in the employment of the city and had been for twenty-three years, consecutively. When asked if he was familiar with the sidewalk when plaintiff was hurt, and the rise in it, he said: “I am familiar with it; there is an offset in the. sidewalk about sixty feet, more or less, north of the north line of Locust street in the [461]*461sidewalk on the west side of Third street; 'in other words, the sidewalk in front of houses 407, 409 and 411, which are houses above grade; that is to say they are not on a line of the. grade of the street. Third street, between Locust aud Yine streets, has a fall from the nprth to the south of two feet in a hundred. About 1874 my attention was called to the condition of that sidewalk. My attention was called to it by the city engineer, Mr. Hamilton.

“Q. Did you go and examine the sidewalk at that time? A. I examined the sidewalk at that time and found that the sidewalk was not on grade, and I notified the parties in interest then to have the sidewalk lowered to the proper grade so as to obliterate this offset.

“Q. What was done with the sidewalk? A. The party in interest occupying house 407 reduced his sidewalk to the proper grade, which caused a set-off at that point, the other parties not having put their sidewalk down to grade; which offset is there still. The offset is about six inches high and perpendicular. I know of this offset being in the sidewalk since 1874, and I have been an officer in the street department of this city ever since and am still an officer therein.

UQ. Third street is a public and improved street is it not? A. Yes, it is a public street; it is policed, graded and kept in repair by the city.”

Cross-examination: “ Q. How recently have you examined that street? A. I examined it the day before yesterday.

“Q. Third street, between Locust and Yine, slants, does it not? A. It slants from north to the south. Yine street is higher than Locust, and Washington avenue is still higher.

“ Q. What is the extent of the slope between Yine and Locust streets? A. Well, it is about two feet to the hundred, or whatever length the block is.

[462]*462“Q. If this little step were not in the pavement, it would be necessary to slant the pavement more, would it not? A. Yes,1 sir.

“Q. During that time you have done nothing to change the condition of it? A. I have no authority to interfere with the matter personally.

Q. In the city of St. Louis, the condition of the streets, that is the hills and valleys, or what they call the topography of the various localities of the city, makes it necessary in some cases to have these set-offs, does it not? A. I have never known a set-off to be made in a sidewalk between two cross streets; I have never seen the necessity of making one. I don’t remember ever seeing one in any city I have been in. Nothing in the city of St. Louis, that I can conceive of, would make it necessary to make such a set-off.

UQ. If, when the slant- and the general nature of the street was in such a condition that if the pavement were made to slant gradually to such an extent that in bad weather in the winter it would make it slippery, in that case would you not deem it advisable to have a step rather than have the slant for the entire length of the street? A. If a street was being built under my directions, I would not, in any case, advise that course; I know of streets in cities that have sixteen foot fall in a hundred ; that is ten feet more than any street we have here, except Washington Avenue from Main to the river, and there is no offset there; Vfashington avenue rises twenty-eight feet from Front street to Main.

. “Q.

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Related

State Ex Rel. City of Jefferson v. Shain.
124 S.W.2d 1194 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
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110 S.W.2d 371 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1937)
Shopbell v. City of St. Joseph
49 S.W.2d 301 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 369, 120 Mo. 457, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biermann-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1894.