Ditsch v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.

128 S.W.2d 1055, 233 Mo. App. 1163, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 39
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 1055 (Ditsch v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ditsch v. Kansas City Power & Light Co., 128 S.W.2d 1055, 233 Mo. App. 1163, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 39 (Mo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*1165 BLAND, J.

— This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $3000, and defendant has appealed.

The facts show that plaintiff was injured on December 27, 1937, when she fell through a trapdoor in her residence in Kansas City, which door had been left open bjr a meter reader employed by the *1166 defendant. Plaintiff, at the time of her injury, was fifty-nine years of age. She had lived in the house for a great many years. It consisted of two stories, containing six rooms, a bath, two halls and a basement. It had three- rooms on the first floor and' three on the second. The house faced east. The kitchen was at the back. The kitchen was thirteen feet, eight inches east and west and eleven feet, three inches north and south. There was a window in the- north and one in the west wall of the kitchen. There was a porch- on the south side of the kitchen which had a door at its west end leading to the outside. There also was a door in the south wall of the kitchen leading to the porch, -the upper half of which was glass. The porch was enclosed, two feet of the top being of glass, the remainder of wood. There were voile pin-dot curtains on the door and- the windows of the kitchen. These curtains were red with rose colored dots. In addition to the curtains these openings had olive-green shades. There were two electric lights in the kitchen; one in the middle of the ceiling, which was operated by a switch on the east side of the wall between the kitchen door, leading to the front part of the house, and the pantry, and one over the sink on the south wall, which was operated by a pull chain. There was a pantry adjoining the kitchen to the east; the north wall of the pantry being on a line with the north wall of the kitchen. There was a solid wooden door leading from the kitchen into the pantry. This door opened toward the kitchen and, when open, it rested against the north wall of the kitchen. There-was a “six foot” icebox standing against the north wall between the window in the kitchen and the pantry door. There was barely enough room between the iceb'ox and the pantry for the door to open against the wall. This door was two feet, four inches wide. The pantry, itself, was two feet,' four inches north and south and six feet east and west. The entire floor of the pantry consisted of a trapdoor which, when raised, permitted entry into, the basement by means of a flight of steps. The place between the kitchen door and the west edge of the trapdoor consisted of only the width of a threshold board under the pantry door; The trapdoor opened from the south and against the north wall. The north wall of the pantry consisted of dark colored panel boards and were of the same color as the trapdoor. The stairway to the basement consisted of ten steps. ' There was a window on the north wall of the pantry two feet wide and four feet high. On this window there was an olive-green shade and a pink and white striped gingham curtain. The only artificial light in the pantry was an electric light located in -the ceiling about the middle -of the pantry. This light was operated bj^ means of a drop-cord. -In order to operate it, it was necessary for a person to take two or three steps out on the trapdoor. About five inches inside of the pantry, and on the south wall thereof, was a switch which operated the light in the basement. One could reach in and operate this switch without stepping upon the *1167 trapdoor. The plaintiff in going into the pantry for any purpose would not turn on the basement light for the reason that when the trapdoor was down it was of no aid in entering or using the pantry.

When plaintiff decided to go to the basement she would turn on the basement light first, then open the trapdoor. After she would turn on the basement light and open the trapdoor she could see the light from the basement and was enabled therefrom, alone, to tell that the trapdoor was open.

On the day of plaintiff’s injury the sky was over-cast. No sunshine occurred in the daylight period. It was a cloudy, dreary and very dark day. The kitchen lights were not turned on during the morning. The window and door shades were drawn half way. About eleven o’clock of that morning plaintiff’s sister came to visit her. About twenty minutes before twelve o’clock, noon, plaintiff went into the pantry to get a box of crackers and a can of soup for lunch for herself and sister. Plaintiff knew where the soup and crackers were so she did not turn on the pantry light when she went into get them. When standing on the threshold, preparing to enter the pantry, she could tell that the trapdoor was closed.

After procuring the soup and crackers, plaintiff and her sister sat at a small table in the center of the kitchen, eating lunch. Plaintiff sat on the south facing north and her sister was on the east facing west. About twenty minutes after plaintiff had been in the pantry and about 12 o’clock, noon, defendant’s electric light meter reader, one Holman, came to the rear door. Plaintiff got up from the table, opened the door and let the meter reader in. She observed that he was not the regular meter reader and in response to his inquiry as to how to get to the basement, plaintiff pointed to the pantry door and he started toward it. Plaintiff testified: “When he opened the door he stood on the threshold. I said, ‘You will have to step back because that is a trapdoor. You will have to raise that from the inside.’ And he did and went on down and that is all that was said, and I said after that before he went down, I said, ‘Will you please close the trapdoor.’ Q. You told him that before he went down? A. Yes, sir. And I said there was also a light there he could turn on if he wished. He said, ‘I have a flashlight.’ ” Plaintiff further testified that she did not know whether he turned on the light; that she observed that the trapdoor and the pantry door were open when he went down to read the meter; that while the meter reader was in the basement the front door bell rang and plaintiff went to answer it; that the caller was a peddler with whom plaintiff talked four or five minutes; that when she returned to the kitchen the pantry door had been closed; that her sister informed her that the meter reader had gone; that plaintiff did not see him go.

Plaintiff further testified that she and her sister finished lunch and plaintiff started to take the crackers bank into the pantry; that plain *1168 tiff looked as she opened the pantry door and it looked the same as when she was in there before and, as before, the trapdoor appeared to be down; that she believed it to be down; that it was dark in the pantry. When she was asked whether her body in the doorway had a tendency to shut off the light, she stated: “Well, I believe so, yes, sir.” She testified that she did not anticipate that the meter reader would leave the trapdoor up; that ‘ ‘ I thought sure he had closed it because I had told him so; ” that she did not attempt to turn on the basement light; that she took a step into the pantry and fell down the basement steps to the floor of the basement, receiving severe injuries. Plaintiff’s sister’s back was to the pantry door and she was not in a position to see whether the meter reader closed the trapdoor when he came out of the basement.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 1055, 233 Mo. App. 1163, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ditsch-v-kansas-city-power-light-co-moctapp-1939.