Burdoin v. Town of Trenton

22 S.W. 728, 116 Mo. 358, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 728 (Burdoin v. Town of Trenton) 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
Burdoin v. Town of Trenton, 22 S.W. 728, 116 Mo. 358, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 293 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Barclay, J.

Plaintiff’s action is based on alleged negligence of defendant in permitting a highway to remain in a dangerous condition, in consequence of which she sustained injuries.

The pleadings need not be recited. They raise the issues of defendant’s negligence as above noted, and, on the other side, of plaintiff’s contributory negligence.

The tendency of plaintiff’s testimony is to prove that as she was passing along Fifth street, in the town of Trenton, on her way home from church, after dark, May 11,1890, she fell into an opening in the public sidewalk and was injured. Two boards, which originally had formed part of the highway for pedestrians, were wanting at that point, and had been since the previous January, leaving a hole twelve or fourteen inches wide and about fifteen inches deep, into which plaintiff fell. She was walking by the side of another woman, and two others were a short distance in advance.

Plaintiff lived a few blocks away, and knew that the sidewalk in the vicinity of the accident was in a bad condition, generally; but she disclaimed knowledge of the particular defect that caused the injury.

The extent of her damages will be referred to further along.

She obtained a verdict and judgment for $3,000, which, after the ordinary motions and exceptions, defendant has brought to the supreme court for review.

A variety of errors have been assigned in the proceedings on the circuit; but preliminary to taking them up, a more formal issue calls for some remark.

[369]*369I. The plaintiff insists that the last bill of exceptions of defendant is not entitled to a place in the record, because filed out of time.

The motions for new trial and in arrest were overruled, defendant took its appeal and gave its bond for a stay of execution, all at the August term, 1890. At the same time an order of the court was entered giving defendant until the third Monday in October to file its exceptions. It filed a bill within that period; but after-wards, upon defendant’s counsel observing that its refused requests for instructions were not included in it, the trial judge, in vacation, December 2,1890, made-an order extending the time for filing an amendatory bill of exceptions to December 31, 1890. The final bill was accordingly allowed, signed and made a part of the record, December 30, 1890. It differs from that first filed only in supplying the refused instructions mentioned.

The case was begun in July, 1890. The law governing the point now before us was then expressed, and ever - since has been, in section 2168, Eevised Statutes, 1889, an enactment which went into force with the general revision of the statutes, in 1889. It was plainly intended to modify the stringency of the former law on the subject, as construed by the courts, and to enlarge the opportunities for securing a review by appeal or error.

The order of the circuit judge extending the time to file the bill does not expressly recite that it was “for good cause shown;” but as he acted in the premises it will be assumed that he found such cause, as the basis for his action. It was for him to determine, in his judicial capacity, the sufficiency of the cause. His allowing further time necessarily implied a finding by him that a good cause existed. So there is nothing in [370]*370the objection that his order fails to show any cause for the extension.

' But the question yet remains whether the statute conferred authority to make such an order after the expiration of the time allowed for filing the bill, the term of the final judgment having closed. That the judge might, within the period granted, have extended the time beyond it, is very clear from the language of the section. But is it a fair and reasonable construction to hold that he may, at any date thereafter, however remote, without consent of the parties, ‘‘extend’7 the right to file the bill, when- that right has already ceased? We think not. His action, to be effective in extending the time, should be taken while the period allowed to file the bill is yet current — that is to say, while there is yet something left to extend.

Defendant’s counsel at this juncture suggest that though the second bill may not be good as an original one, it can stand as an amendment of the first.

The trial court has, no doubt, power, according to the principles and usages of law, to amend a bill of exceptions, as it has power to amend other parts of its record, nunc pro ümc, on a proper showing, after the lapse of the term of the judgment. But the action of the circuit judge, in vacation, ex parte, allowing and signing the second bill of exceptions, containing new matter, after the expiration of the prescribed time for filing such a bill, can surely not be sustained as an exercise of the judicial power to amend the records of the court. This is too evident to justify more than a passing ruling.

We consider that the second, or amendatory bill of December 30, 1890, is not properly a part of the record on this appeal and must be placed out of view.

As the original bill, however, was filed in season, the only practical effect of this ruling on the review of [371]*371-the case is to eliminate the points arising upon the refusal of certain requests for instructions by defendant.

A number of other questions remain.

II. The first instruction, given at plaintiff’sinstance, is criticised as imposing too great a liability in declaring it the duty of defendant to keep its sidewalks in “good repair, free from obstructions and safe for travel, in •the ordinary modes, by day or night.” If that statement stood alone the objection would have greater force than it does now, for the liability of the town to plaintiff (under its charter, Sess. Laws, 1856 — 7, p. 350; .and later amendments) depends on its failure to exercise ordinary care to keep its thoroughfares in a condition of reasonable safety. It is not bound absolutely to keep them in good repair constantly.

But the part of the instruction quoted is merely an-abstract proposition, introducing a call for a finding of facts, which conforms strictly to the correct rule of law on the subject. Reading the instruction through, we see that it required the jury to find an omission of ordinary care on defendant’s part as essential to a verdict for plaintiff. That rule was emphatically repeated in the instructions given for the defendant. We regard the point criticised, therefore, as having no prejudicial bearing on the merits of the case, and hence -as furnishing no substantial basis for- disturbing the judgment. Revised Statutes, 1889, sections 2100 and 2303.

III. The instruction is further objected to because the words “without fault or want of proper care on her part” are said not to accurately state the law as to contributory negligence. A finding that plaintiff was “without fault,” would certainly comprehend that she had used ordinary care.

In the seventh instruction for defendant the1 court gave a very full statement of a rule on the subject of [372]*372contributory negligence in terms requested by defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 728, 116 Mo. 358, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burdoin-v-town-of-trenton-mo-1893.