Callaway v. Newman Mercantile Co.

12 S.W.2d 491, 321 Mo. 766, 62 A.L.R. 1056, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 753
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 491 (Callaway v. Newman Mercantile Co.) 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
Callaway v. Newman Mercantile Co., 12 S.W.2d 491, 321 Mo. 766, 62 A.L.R. 1056, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 753 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

Plaintiff sued defendant corporation to recover damages in the sum of $15,000 for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by her in a fall upon a sidewalk in the city of Joplin, which defendant is charged with having negligently permitted to fall into a state of disrepair. At the conclusion of plaintiff's evidence, the trial court, at the request of defendant, gave to the jury a peremptory instruction to return a verdict for defendant, whereupon plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside, and judgment was entered in favor of defendant. After timely, but unsuccessful, procedural steps to set aside the involuntary nonsuit and the judgment thereon, plaintiff was allowed an appeal to this court from the judgment so entered. *Page 770

The defendant was the lessee, tenant and occupant of a business building, situate on the southwest corner of Main and Sixth streets in the city of Joplin, where it conducted a large department store. The building in question was constructed and is owned by another corporation, the Newman Realty Company, which latter corporation rented or leased said building and premises to defendant under a month to month tenancy. The two corporations have different stockholders, but the majority of the capital stock of the Realty Company is owned and held by individual stockholders of the Mercantile Company, and vice versa. The building has a frontage of approximately one hundred feet on both Main and Sixth streets, and extends five stories above the level of said streets, with a basement below the level of the streets.

The evidence of plaintiff tends to show that the outside, or east, wall of the building in question is located about twelve feet, ten and three-fourths inches from the west curb-line of Main Street; that the sidewalk width on the west side of Main Street is ten feet and one inch; and that the east wall of the building is located thirty-three and three-fourths inches west from the west line of dedicated Main Street, or the east property line abutting said street. In other words, the distance between the east wall of the building and the west curb-line of Main Street is twelve feet and ten and three-fourths inches, and the east ten feet and one inch of said space lies within the street lines of dedicated Main Street, while the west thirty-three and three-fourths inches of said space is located within the property line of the Newman Realty Company. The erection of the said building was completed in October or November, 1910. The Main Street sidewalk on the east side of said building was constructed concurrently with the erection of the building, and by the building contractor, with a full width of twelve feet and ten and three-fourths inches, and extending one hundred feet, north and south, along the east, or Main Street, frontage of the building. Plaintiff claims to have been injured upon this sidewalk on November 20, 1923, or about thirteen years after the completion of said sidewalk. One of plaintiff's witnesses, the city engineer of Joplin, testified that "during all that time, the sidewalk has been used by the public as a sidewalk; no dividing line at this place thirty-three and three-fourths inches from the building; nothing visible to indicate there is a line to cross; the entire width, twelve feet and ten and three-fourths inches sidewalk, has all the time been open to and used by the public as a sidewalk." The uncontradicted testimony of other witnesses is to the same effect, so that it apparently stands conceded that the entire width of twelve feet and ten and three-fourths inches had been continuously used by the public as a sidewalk since its completion in 1910. *Page 771

The evidence further shows that, in the construction of the building, the basement was extended easterly and outwardly from the east main wall of the building and across the east property line, so as to extend some five or six feet over the west line of dedicated Main Street. In order to give light into the basement, beneath the sidewalk, the sidewalk was constructed according to a plan or system, known as the bar-lock lighting system, consisting of a steel frame, supported by pilasters, in which frame rows, or series, of glass prisms are set, at regular intervals, and grouted with cement to hold the prisms firmly in place. After such construction, the sidewalk presented a smooth, level surface. The first series, or row, of glass prisms were distant about four or five inches from the east main wall of the building, and the several successive rows of prisms extended outwardly from the east main wall of the building about eight feet, or approximately three-fourths of the entire width of the sidewalk, the balance of which width consisted of solid concrete construction. The glass prisms were of a uniform size, each being about four inches square.

According to her testimony, plaintiff was walking south along the aforesaid sidewalk about 10:30 or eleven o'clock on the morning of November 20, 1923. She had paused to mail a letter in a street box near the curb, and had turned toward a display window in defendant's department store, and had taken three or four steps, when, according to her testimony, the heel of her shoe was caught in a hole in the sidewalk, occasioned by one of the glass prisms having been broken out of the frame of the sidewalk. She was carrying several parcels at the time, and the manner in which the heel of her shoe was caught caused her to lose her balance and to fall upon the sidewalk, thereby wrenching and straining her body. Plaintiff testified that her "best estimation would be that hole was about two, or two and a half, feet from the show window; the mail box is just on the outside of the walk just south of the east entrance; I would judge I went about four and a half, five or six feet, somewhere in that neighborhood, before I fell."

Witnesses on behalf of plaintiff testified that, at different times and on different occasions, they saw holes in the sidewalk where glass prisms had been broken from the sidewalk and had not been replaced. The composite testimony of such witnesses respecting the condition of the sidewalk may be stated as follows: "Well, it was bad — cracked along there — the vibration of that walk would break the glass and crack them and fall down through; crack on the underneath side and keep dropping down so they have nothing but a shell on top, and about the time you would step on it, it would go through; well, there is glass out all along on the east side; they would repair it off and on when it would cave out and a hole came in; *Page 772

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 491, 321 Mo. 766, 62 A.L.R. 1056, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callaway-v-newman-mercantile-co-mo-1928.