Boyle v. Neisner Bros., Inc.

87 S.W.2d 227, 230 Mo. App. 90, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 96
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 227 (Boyle v. Neisner Bros., Inc.) 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
Boyle v. Neisner Bros., Inc., 87 S.W.2d 227, 230 Mo. App. 90, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 96 (Mo. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

*94 HOSTETTER,-P. J.

This suit-was instituted.-in the Circuit Court of-the-City of St. Louis,, Missouri, on the 17th day of January, 1933, against'Nicholas Seibel and Birdie Seibel,-his wife, William W Seibel, and Cora-M. Seibel, his wife, and Neisner Brothers, Inc.,-a New York corporation and a- resident of that State. The Seibels were all -residénts of- Missouri, two of them residing in the City of St. Louis and the other, two in the - county of St. Louis. ■ They were the owners in fee of a certain lot-of ground located, at the northeast corner of Irving-and Easton Avénues in Wellston, .St. Louis ■ C'ounty, and had leased the same to Neisner -Brothers, Inc.,-for a term of ninety-nine years, .-commencing on January 1, 1930, and. the latter conducted a five and ten cent store on said premises, -in the building which it had constructed- thereon- in the year 1929.-

The evidence disclosed that plaintiff, on the night-of December 17, 1932, was. walking in a northerly direction .on the sidewalk on the *95 east side of Irving Avenue (a much traveled public highway); that when she had gotten opposite a side door in the building in which Neisner Brothers, Inc., conducted its store, the door was opened from the. inside by Frank Williams, a boy, and struck her. in the back throwing her to the pavement and causing her to sustain severe injuries; that the door was a large steel one, weighing about two hundred pounds, and opened out onto the- sidewalk on which plaintiff was walking; that the sidewalk from the wall .of ,the store building to the. curb was nine feet one inch wide and the door was three feet six inches wide, and when opened projected over the sidewalk for a distance of two feet eight and one-half inches. , ...

Frank Williams in his testimony stated that he went in.and out of this door several times every day and that he.,noted, up to three.or four days prior to the time plaintiff was struck by the door, that the door check was in good working order and that it required a good deal of exertion to push the door open, but that, for the three or four days just before plaintiff’s injury, the door worked very easily and slight ‘pressure from the inside of the door would cause it to swing rapidly outward and that, on the day in question, he opened the door in the manner that he had usually done, not recalling that,the door cheek was not working as it formerly had, and that the door flew open rapidly, and struck the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s amended petition, upon which the case, was tried, set out the facts substantially as above detailed, and contained, divers charges of negligence and- an averment that it constituted a nuisance to permit the door to swing out over and across the, public sidewalk much used by pedestrians, and that the use of 'Such door, SQ located, constituted a nuisance. . • . , ...

Neisner Brothers, Inc., and the four, defendant Seibels. collectively, filed separate answers, both. being general, denials. ....

The cause being tried, the plaintiff recovered a verdict for .$5,500 against defendant Neisner Brothers, Inc. Inasmuch as .no point is made on the ground that the verdict is excessive, we do not describe the nature and extent of plaintiff’s injuries...

On February 8, 1933, before defendant Neisner Brothers, Inc.,, filed its answer, it filed its petition and bond for removal of the cause to the District Court of the United States for the Eastern Division.of the Eastern. Judicial District of Missouri, having prior .thereto served plaintiff’s counsel with notice of the intended application for removal and including a .copy of the bond and petition, and, on February 15, 1933, the circuit court, denied the application for removal and said Neisner Brothers, Inc., on .March 22, 1933, filed a full transcript,of .the record in said United States District Court, and, on March 17., 1933, plaintiff filed her m.otion in said United States District. Court .to re! mand the.cause to the circuit court, and, on May 9, 1933, the.plain *96 tiff’s said motion to remand the cause to the circuit court was sustained and the cause was so remanded.

Thereafter, during September and October, 1933, the plaintiff filed her amended petition in the circuit court, to which the defendánts filed their separate answers as hereinbefore set out. On February 5, 1934, at and during the F'ebruary term, 1934, of the circuit court, the cause proceeded to trial in division No. 5 of said circuit court, before Honorable Frank C. O’Malley, as Judge, and a jury. On February 6, 1934, the evidence in chief on behalf of the plaintiff being concluded, the four Seibel defendants presented their instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which instruction the court marked as given and read the same to the jury, whereupon the plaintiff, by her counsel, took an involuntary nonsuit as to said four defendants with leave to move to set the same aside. Then the defendant Neisner Brothers, Inc., filed its second petition and bond for a removal of the cause to the United States District Court on account of a diversity of citizenship between the plaintiff and the remaining defendant. This petition for removal was also denied by the court. No written notice was previously given to the plaintiff of the intention to file this second petition for removal. The Neisner Brothers, Inc., through its attorneys, orally moved the court to require plaintiff to elect on which ground of her petition she would proceed, on the nuisance charge or the negligence charge, set out in her amended petition, and the court sustained such motion and plaintiff, through her counsel, and, over her objection and exception to the order of the court, elected to stand on the nuisance theory and thereupon defendant Neisner Brothers, Inc., asked the court to declare that plaintiff could not recover on the nuisance charge, which the court refused, and, the trial proceeding, evidence was offered by defendant and also by plaintiff in rebuttal and the trial finished with the result as set out hereinbefore, and, after an ineffective motion for a new trial the cause was brought to this court by defendant, Neisner Brothers, Inc., by appeal for review.

The first and chief assignment of error urged, is that the trial court erred in refusing to allow the petition of defendant Neisner Brothers, Inc., for removal of the cause to the United States District Court. The contention of counsel for defendant is that when the four Seibel resident defendants were let out of the case by the trial court giving and reading an instruction to the jury in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence as to them, the plaintiff failed to save an exception to such action of the court and, therefore, it was a voluntary dismissal, in which event, the case, then being one solely between a resident of Missouri and a resident of New York, was removable; whereas, counsel for the plaintiff claims that the case was tried under the rule of court that all adverse rulings of the court were deemed *97 to be excepted to as a matter of course and that, in making np the bill of exceptions the court reporter would note therein exceptions to all adverse rulings whether they were orally made or not during the progress of the trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 227, 230 Mo. App. 90, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-neisner-bros-inc-moctapp-1935.