Bradley v. City of Spickardsville

90 Mo. App. 416, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 2, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 90 Mo. App. 416 (Bradley v. City of Spickardsville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. City of Spickardsville, 90 Mo. App. 416, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 327 (kanctapp 1901).

Opinion

BROADDUS, J.

The plaintiff sues the defendant as an incorporated city of the fourth class, for injuries alleged to have been received on account of a defective sidewalk in said city. The answer is a general denial and also alleging contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff. There was a trial before a jury resulting in a judgment and verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,500, and from which the defendant appealed. The defendant contends that its instruction number one, in the nature of a demurrer to plaintiff’s case, should have been sustained.

The plaintiff testified that on the thirteenth of November, 1899, as she was passing over the sidewalk in question [421]*421•with Miss Edna McCann, the latter stepped upon the end of a loose board which caused it to tip up at the other end, under which plaintiff caught her foot, whereby she was thrown down and injured. On cross-examination she stated that about a week before her injury she noticed a loose board at about the locality where she was thrown down. She was asked the following questions to which she gave the following answers, to-wit:

“Q. You had seen a loose board right there in that particular locality just the week before, hadn’t you ? A. Yes, sir. Q. Yet in going over there you didn’t look for or pay any attention to it? A. No, sir; I didn’t think — I was walking along and didn’t think about loose boards.”

It is claimed that the plaintiff herself furnished the evidence of her own negligence. The fact that she did not think of the loose board and consequently did not look for it, may have been evidence tending to show contributory negligence, yet under all the facts it did not conclusively establish it. There was an intervening agency over which she had no control that was the direct and proximate cause of the injury in connection with the loose board. It was her companion, Miss McCann, who stepped upon the loose board and not the plaintiff. It did not appear that she would have been thrown down and injured had it not been for this intervening agent, and it therefore became a question of fact for the jury, and not a matter of law for the court to decide, that the plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence. The rule laid down in Cohn v. City of Kansas, 108 Mo. 387, is not applicable to the facts in this ease. In that case the defect in the highway was obviously dangerous, and the plaintiff, seeing and knowing it dangerous in its character, was held to have assumed the risk of the danger. However, the judge in commenting on the law of the case draws the distinction between it and cases of the character of this, viz.: “A person is not bound to abandon [422]*422the use of a highway, open to the public, for the simple reason that it is known to be out of repair or in a defective condition; the duty is, however, imposed on him to use ordinary care to avoid the defect, and the knowledge on his part that the street is out of repair -is a circumstance to go to the jury in determining the question whether he did use such care.” See, also, Gerdes v. Iron Co., 124 Mo. 347.

There is another element in the case to be taken into consideration, and that is, the evidence shows that the plaintiff had discovered the defect in the walk the previous week, and it would not do to assume that the defendant had neglected to do its duty in the meantime and repair said sidewalk; for it is a familiar principle of law that negligence will not be presumed against either plaintiff or defendant. It would therefore be necessary, in determining whether plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence, to consider whether she was not entitled, from the length of time said walk had been defective, to the presumption, if the facts would justify it in the minds of the jury, that the defendant had performed its duty and repaired the defect.

On the trial, the plaintiff offered to show that the defendant had organized as a city of the fourth class. The defendant objected to the record offered because it did not comply with the law. The record, however, was admitted, and this is assigned as a ground, for reversal. As defendant’s answer was not sworn to, the incorporation stood admitted. R. S. 1899, sec. 746; Walker v. Point Pleasant, 49 Mo. App. 244; Eubank v. Edina, 88 Mo. 650.

The further objection made to said record is that it fails to describe the territory within'the limits of the pretended corporation as provided by statute. The description is as' follows: ' “Beginning at the northeast corner of the southwest quarter of the porthwest quarter of section number twenty-two, thence one-half mile west to the northwest comer of the south[423]*423east of the northwest quarter of section number twenty-one, thence south three-fourths of a mile to the southwest corner of the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of said section number twenty-one; thence east one-half a mile to the southeast corner of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of said section number twenty-two; thence north three-fourths of a mile to the place of beginning. All in township 63, range 24.” We find the beginning corner, then the'next corner west, then the corner south and then the next fixed corner east is one-fourth of a mile farther east than the beginning corner on the north; but the distance is given as one-half mile which would make that corner correspond with the beginning corner on the north. It is clear what territory is intended to be included and the corner at the east end of the south line must give place to the description as given of the distance from the prior corner. Zeibold v. Foster, 118 Mo. 349; Jameson v. Fopiano, 48 Mo. 194.

It is also claimed that it was error to allow plaintiff to prove that she was a widow. It was properly admitted by the court in relation to her right, as being a feme sole, to recover for the value of her own services. Cullar v. Railroad, 84 Mo. App. 340; Plummer v. City of Milan, 10 Mo. App. 598.

The defendant claims that the court erred in admitting plaintiff’s witness, Mrs. Yanderpool, to state her conclusion as to the condition of the sidewalk. This, of course, was not permissible, but as it was shown by the witnesses on both sides, and most conclusively, that there was a loose board in the sidewalk which caused plaintiff’s fall, it is hard to conceive how defendant could have been injured by the admission of such testimony. The judge evidently intended to exclude it but he did not do so expressly in words, which he should have done in order that the jury might understand clearly what was meant by his language.

We do not think the case should be reversed by reason of [424]*424the language used by Mr. Knight, the plaintiff’s counsel, in his closing address to the jury. The language objected to was: “These gentlemen pretend to believe this walk was in good condition. No boards loose there. Why, gentlemen, it is in evidence that others had been falling on these death-traps.” The court corrected the attorney and said that there was no evidence of the kind and that he should keep within the record. We do not think, and it is not shown, that the remarks alluded to had any influence with the jury. After what the court said in the matter, it is not probable that the jury was influenced to the least extent by them.

It seems the attorney, in closing, also read from a paper what he claimed was the testimony of Miss McCann as shown by a transcript of the stenographer’s notes. In the ease of Padgitt v. Moll et al., 159 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
90 Mo. App. 416, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-city-of-spickardsville-kanctapp-1901.