Brooks ex rel. Brooks v. Rubin

293 S.W.2d 295, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 758
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 9, 1956
DocketNo. 45247
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 293 S.W.2d 295 (Brooks ex rel. Brooks v. Rubin) 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
Brooks ex rel. Brooks v. Rubin, 293 S.W.2d 295, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 758 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Larry Brooks, IS years old at the time, was grievously injured by a fall when, on October 4, 1951, a 2" x 4" railing on which he was. sitting, at the landing of an outside back stairway at 4634 — 38 Troost in Kansas City gave way. At the close of all the evidence in his action for $200,000 damages, through his father as next friend, the trial court directed a verdict for defendants. Plaintiff below has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

As we view it, plaintiff’s petition was on the theory that a landlord-tenant relationship existed between defendants and Larry’s parents, that defendants had retained control of the back stairs and porches leading to the Brooks’ and other tenants’ apartments, and that defendants negligently failed to use ordinary care to maintain such stairs in a reasonably safe condition for the use intended. Plaintiff averred, inter alia, that defendants were the lessees in a certain 10-year lease dated April 1, 1946, whereby they had leased the premises involved from the owners. Defendants admitted the execution of that lease as alleged but denied all other allegations of plaintiff’s petition, including the averments that there was a landlord-tenant relationship between them and plaintiff’s parents, and that they had retained control of the stairs in question. Defendants’ answers alleged that the second and third floors of the mentioned building and the stairways from the ground leading thereto were subleased to one Herman Strecker for a term commencing June 1, 1951, and ending March 31, 1956, and that all dominion and control with respect to the premises so subleased were thereby released to the said Strecker and that the defect in the stairway railing, if any, was at a place under the control of defendants’ sublessee. Defendants’ evidence, to which reference in some detail will later be made, supported that allegation in that defendants adduced in evidence the sublease containing the pleaded provisions. Plaintiff here takes [297]*297the position that he was in no wise bound by defendants’ evidence including the written sublease and relies solely on his own evidence to support his contention that he made a jury case.

We therefore initially examine plaintiff’s evidence and the reasonable inferences therefrom from a standpoint most favorable to him. Plaintiff put in evidence several paragraphs of a petition which had been filed by instant defendants, as plaintiffs there, in an action in the Circuit Court of Jackson County. That petition showed on its face that the matters stated pertained to the underlying lease which instant defendants admitted they had executed in April 1941. Those paragraphs were admitted on the theory that the statements contained therein constituted admissions against the interests of instant defendants.

For present purposes, we shall assume that the statements contained in that pleading were reasonably construable to mean what instant plaintiff contends they meant. So construing those statements, defendants admitted that they had leased the entire building in question from the owners (an estate) in 1932 and continuously had occupied that 3-storied building as tenants from then until July 2, 1951, and that since April 1, 1946, they had occupied said building as tenants under the 10-year lease heretofore referred to dated April 1, 1946; and that defendants had spent large sums of money in remodeling the building, including an expenditure of sums in rehabilitating the second and third floors thereof and in maintaining the building in a tenantable condition. The lease, dated April 1, 1946, was by specific reference made a part of the “admission” petition by the averments of one of the paragraphs which instant plaintiff read in evidence. Among the provisions contained in that lease was one which gave the lessees the right to assign, mortgage, and sublet the leasehold estate and the interest created by the lease.

We shall further assume, without deciding, that plaintiff’s evidence that his parents were at accident time, October 4, 1951, second-floor tenants in the building in question and that they used the stairway in question in common with other second and third-floor tenants, in addition to defendants’ “admissions” heretofore noted, was sufficient evidence, standing alone, to permit the inferences that on October 4, 1951, there existed a landlord-tenant relationship between defendants and plaintiff, and that defendants had retained control of and were in control of the common stairway on October 4, 1951.

The fallacy in plaintiff’s present position, however, arises from the fact that his evidence did not stop with the matters heretofore mentioned. On the contrary, plaintiff proved by the testimony of his father and mother that they were, during their entire occupancy of a portion of the building, the tenants of persons other than defendants, i. e., that they did not enter into any landlord-tenant relationship with defendants.

Their testimony was that, in answer to an advertisement, plaintiff’s mother went to a second-floor front apartment of the premises in question where she found Mrs. Hodges waiting to show and rent that apartment; that plaintiff’s mother rented the apartment from Mrs. Hodges in June 1949, and that the Brooks family lived in that front apartment for about a year when they moved to a vacant rear apartment with the approval of and by arrangement with Mrs. Hodges; that during the entire period of their occupancy until June 1951, they paid rent to Mr. and Mrs. Hodges; that the rent receipts were signed only by either Mr. or Mrs. Hodges; that in June 1951, Mrs. Hodges introduced them to Mr. Herman Strecker and stated that they would pay rent to him from then on. Thereafter they continuously, during the remainder of their tenancy and through the accident date of October 4, 1951, paid rent to Mr. Strecker; he gave them rent receipts signed only by him; and in December 1951 Mr. Strecker gave them a written notice to vacate the premises. In addition, [298]*298both Mr. and Mrs. Brooks testified that they had never known defendant I. D. Rubin and Mr. Brooks said that he knew defendant Joseph S. Rubin only as the man who owned the merchandise store on the first floor of the Troost Avenue premises. They said they saw him around the premises, saw him walk up and down the back stairway during that time, but they had not talked with him and did not know at any time what he was doing there.

There was no evidence, direct, or circumstantially supporting a reasonable inference, that either the Hodges or Strecker were, in fact, or in the contemplation of the Brooks, acting as the agent for anyone or in any capacity other than the landlords of those occupying the second and third-floor apartments. The only reasonable conclusion was that the Brooks entered into and maintained a tenant relationship to Hodges and later Strecker as their landlords; that the Brooks recognized Strecker as their landlord on the accident date; and that there was in fact no landlord-tenant relation between plaintiff and defendants.

In view of the foregoing direct and positive evidence adduced by plaintiff, any inferences, which may have arisen from the fact of the Brooks’ occupancy and the “admissions” of defendants, to the effect that the Brooks were the tenants of defendants Rubin and that consequently defendants had retained control of the stairway because it was a stairway used by two or more tenants, and that, therefore, defendants owed plaintiff a duty to use ordinary care to keep the stairway in a reasonably safe condition for the use intended, were destroyed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 S.W.2d 295, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-ex-rel-brooks-v-rubin-mo-1956.