Dinsmore v. City of St. Louis

91 S.W. 95, 192 Mo. 255
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 91 S.W. 95 (Dinsmore v. City of St. Louis) 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
Dinsmore v. City of St. Louis, 91 S.W. 95, 192 Mo. 255 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is an action for ten thousand dollars damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff at about two o ’clock at night, on a date not stated in the pleadings, in November, 1900, on Arlington avenue, about four hundred feet north of St. Louis avenue, and close to where Harlem creek crosses Arlington avenue.

The case was taken on change of venue to St. Charles county.

The plaintiff recovered a verdict for one thousand dollars, and the defendant appealed.

[259]*259The issues.

The petition alleges, ‘ ‘ That on the —--night of November, 1900, the plaintiff was lawfully passing southeast on said Arlington avenue and the said sidewalk thereof, about a half block north of the intersection of Arlington and St. Louis avenues in the city of St. Louis, when she fell into an open and unguarded hole or depression existing in said street alongside the sidewalk, a way upon which the plaintiff was walking,” and was injured; “that said hole or depression in said street was well known to the defendant and its officers and agents in charge of keeping said street in repair, and defendant and its servants, by the exercise of ordinary care, could and would have repaired said street before plaintiff’s said injury, yet neglected to do so, and thereby directly contributed to cause plaintiff’s said injuries.”

The answer is a general denial, coupled with a plea of contributory negligence.

The reply is a general denial.

The case made is this:

The plaintiff was a widow, thirty-eight years old, living in Wellston, just outside the city limits, and about a mile from the place of the accident; she had known Arlington avenue for about seven years; she was engaged in the huckster business and frequently drove over Arlington avenue vending her wares. At least twice before the accident she had walked over Arlington avenue at the point where the accident occurred. Arlington avenue runs north-and-south, and is about a mile north of Easton avenue, and about a mile inside the western city limits. It was a dirt street. The grade had never been established by the city. Along the west side of the street there was a cinder pathway, on an elevation of about two to two and one-half feet above the level of the street. Formerly the property-owners on the street had put down a plank walk, but that getting out of repair, a cinder path had been put in be[260]*260tween the spaces in the plank walk that had become out of repair. This path was about four feet wide. On the side of the path and between the path and the roadway there was a ditch or ravine, which had been washed out by the water flowing into Harlem creek.

The plaintiff’s testimony tends to show that the accident occurred a short distance south of the bridge on Arlington avenue that crossed Harlem creek; that someone had filled up the ditch or ravine with loose earth, but that the water and rain had washed it, so that at the time of the accident the cinder path at the place of the accident was only about one foot and a half wide, and on the side thereof the ravine was about nine feet deep, the cinder path having been washed away to that extent, according to the evidence of the plaintiff, about two months before the accident occurred. The plaintiff had not walked over that portion of the sidewalk at any time since the beginning of the summer before the accident. On the night of the accident plaintiff had attended the wedding of her brother, which took place at a house a short distance north of the place of the accident. About two o’clock in the morning she started home with her two sons and her little girl, about two years old, and her infant, eleven months old, the latter of which she carried. The night was dark and rainy, and the pathway slippery. She walked southward on the west side of Arlington avenue until she crossed the bridge over Harlem creek, and then she-took to the cinder path. There was a light in a house on the opposite side of the street, north of the creek, which showed her the cinder path after she crossed the bridge; but, she says, when she proceeded ■further along it grew darker and darker so that she could not see where the path was. She supposed she was walking in the middle of the path, with her children following her, in single file. When she reached that portion of the path which had been reduced in width by the operation of the water, which was only a [261]*261foot and a half wide, she fell into the ditch and sustained, among other things, a fracture of the right leg. The evidence for the plaintiff further tends to show, that the people usually walked in the middle of the street at this point, hut that when the street was muddy, as it was on this occasion, they walked on the cinder path. The evidence for the plaintiff further tends to show, that the cinder path was made originally in 1898. Touching the question of whether or not the city had thrown the street open to public travel and invited the people to use the street and the pathway, the plaintiff’s evidence was as follows: In addition to what the plaintiff, herself, testified to, • as above indicated, Michael Tenant testified that he had been in the service of the city, and that he and another man had put cinders on the path on Arlington avenue under the directions of the assistant street superintendent for the Fourth district; that the cinders were placed so as to fill out the gaps in the plank sidewalk; that he could not tell exactly when that work was done, nor could he locate exactly the point on Arlington avenue where he had worked, nor yet could he state how far he had placed the cinders on the walk from the bridge over the creek.

Mrs. Annie Churchill testified that she lived nine years on Arlington avenue before the accident; that the cinder sidewalk extended from the bridge “to near the top of the hill and within about a half block of St. Louis avenue;” that the cinders were so placed two or three years, or maybe more, before the accident; that the walk was three or four feet wide; that at the place where the cinders had been washed away the walk was less than a yard wide; that the washout had existed for about two or three weeks, any way, before the accident.

Maggie Crossman testified that she lived on Arlington and St. Louis avenues, and was acquainted with the cinder walk north of St. Louis avenue; that she had seen repairing done on it once by tearing up the boards and putting down the cinders for a distance of a few [262]*262hundred feet; that the cinder walk was three or four feet wide; that on the first of November, 1890, it was wide in some places and “right np near this post the dirt all gave way; it was narrow; it was only about a foot wide, and that the place where the dirt had been cut away was about eight or nine feet deep, and that the incline was steep; that it was in this condition for a few months; I don’t remember how long before that; ’ ’ that between Harlem creek and St. Louis avenue there was but one house, and about at that house was where the pathway was narrow by reason of its having been washed away, as before said; that she seen grading done but did not know who did it.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W. 95, 192 Mo. 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinsmore-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1905.