Fletcher v. North Mehornay Furniture Co.

222 S.W.2d 789, 359 Mo. 607, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 652
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1949
DocketNo. 41199.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 789 (Fletcher v. North Mehornay Furniture 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
Fletcher v. North Mehornay Furniture Co., 222 S.W.2d 789, 359 Mo. 607, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 652 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

Action for damages for personal injuries sustained by a fall on a sidewalk in Kansas City. Verdict and judgment went for plaintiff for $10,000.00 against both defendants and they appealed. Hereinafter appellant North Mehornay Furniture Company will be referred to as Mehornay, and appellant Kansas City as City.

Appellant Mehornay assigns error on the refusal of its motion for a directed verdict at the close of the case, and on plaintiff's (respondent's) instruction No. 1. The City assigns error on respondent's instruction No. 1, and on an alleged excessive verdict.

Respondent fell about 9 a.m. November 25, 1946, while she was walking west on the south side of 11th Street in front of Mehornay's store at the southeast corner of 11th and McGee. Respondent alleged that Mehornay was negligent in that it had reconstructed a portion of the sidewalk in front of its store of a "marble or tile substance (terrazzo) which slanted and was smooth, slick, highly polished and glazed and when wet became slippery and was not reasonably safe for use by pedestrians to walk thereon"; she alleged that the City was negligent "in that it caused, allowed and permitted" Mehornay "to so construct said sidewalk and permitted same to remain in said unsafe condition for" more than a year; that both appellants "knew or by the exercise of the proper degree of care could have known that said sidewalk at said place was not reasonably safe for pedestrians to use"; that at the time respondent fell "said sidewalk was wet and thereby rendered slick and slippery."

Except admissions about which there is no dispute, Mehornay's separate answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The City's answer was to the same effect. In Mehornay's charge of contributory negligence it is alleged that respondent's injuries, if any, "were caused or directly contributed to by her own negligence and inattention to her safety in that plaintiff passed along the sidewalk alongside this defendant's store at a time when the *Page 610 weather was snowy and rainy and the sidewalks, streets, and all exposed property were wet and covered with a slush of snow and ice without watching where she was stepping." The City, in its separate answer and for its charge of contributory negligence, alleged that any injuries respondent may have received "were directly caused by [791] plaintiff's negligence in failing to use her eyes and senses in pursuing her course along the sidewalk."

Respondent submitted her case as to Mehornay in instruction No. 1 on the hypotheses (1) that this appellant, for its own extraordinary use, constructed the terrazzo portion of the sidewalk; (2) that the sidewalk was negligently constructed in that it "was slanted, slick, polished, and when wet became slippery, and because thereof was not reasonably safe for pedestrians." As to the City the jury was told in respondent's instruction No. 1 that it was the duty of the City to exercise ordinary care to keep and maintain the sidewalk where respondent fell in a reasonably safe condition for pedestrians, and that if found that the City knew or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known of the condition of the sidewalk as hypothesized in the submission as to Mehornay, etc. then a finding was directed in favor of respondent and against the City.

Respondent was 53 years old; she resided at the Drake Hotel, 1016 Locust Street, Kansas City, about two and a half blocks from the point where she fell. She was employed by the Hudnut Sales Corporation which sold cosmetics in the stores of others; her employer sold cosmetics in the Katz Drug Store at 12th and McGee Streets; this store was where she worked and she was on her way to work when she fell.

Respondent testified that on the morning of her fall she arose about 7 o'clock; saw snow on the tops of surrounding buildings; that it looked like it wasn't snowing; that she left the hotel without her umbrella; that she walked south on Locust to the north side of 11th Street; there got coffee in a restaurant; that "it started to mist" while she was in the restaurant; wind was from the south; that without her umbrella she knew her hair would get wet so to protect her hair, when she came out of the restaurant she crossed (south) to the south side of 11th Street; then walked west on 11th "close as I could" to the buildings. "While walking west I did not notice any ice; the streets were wet, but I was not slipping as I came along; I had not seen anyone slip; there was no snow on the sidewalk; when I had walked about three feet on the terrazzo (in front of Mehornay's store) both feet went out from under me and I fell; when I fell I was walking normally; was looking ahead; the terrazzo where I fell was wet and dirty and the streets were wet. The shoes I was wearing at the time had Cuban heels about two inches high; the heels had a leather finish, no rubber. I had probably walked on the south side of 11th there before; I had been in Mehornay's store a few times." *Page 611

The sidewalk on the south side of 11th Street along which respondent walked, until she came to the terrazzo portion in front of Mehornay's store, was of an asphalt composition. In 1938, under a permit from the City, Mehornay repaired or rebuilt a portion of the sidewalk in front of its store by removing the old sidewalk in a circle like area, beginning at the building and east of the entrance doors and extending north to a point about two feet from the curb, placing terrazzo in the area removed. The terrazzo area extended around on McGee Street on the west side of Mehornay's store. The entrance was a corner entrance. The sidewalk where respondent fell slanted to the north; the slant was about 2½ inches in 9 feet, 5/18 of an inch to the foot.

Respondent's witness, Ben Poysner, a chemical engineer who testified as to the slant of the terrazzo portion of the sidewalk where respondent fell, further testified: "I examined yesterday the terrazzo that extends out on the sidewalk area and particularly that part of the terrazzo that is on the 11th Street side of Mehornay's store; the surface is quite smooth; there doesn't seem to be any great amount of abrasion on the surface; it has a rather slick appearance. Q. Did you examine it for abrasives, carborundum, or anything like that? A. I examined the surface; I didn't see any abrasives on the surface at all that you could tell by feeling. Q. You could not find any abrasives on this material? A. I could not say they [792] were apparent; the weather was dry when I examined the terrazzo. There is oil in the asphalt; it would stick to the shoes (of pedestrians). Wet weather would certainly make the terrazzo surface more slippery; it would be slicker than the surrounding sidewalk when wet; terrazzo is slicker when wet than when dry." On cross examination the witness testified that he would hesitate to say that the terrazzo in front of Mehornay's store was "a normal type of construction of terrazzo for this neighborhood around Kansas City here on a sidewalk"; that there was not much angle (slant) on most terrazzo sidewalk he had seen; that it happens sidewalks have an angle; they are not frequent. "Some (terrazzo entrances in downtown Kansas City, we infer) are exposed; some don't have an opportunity to get rain on them, or water on them. I don't know any steeper than that" (the terrazzo in front of Mehornay's); that (the terrazzo) in front of Mehornay's "had a canopy over it".

Mehornay had evidence that the terrazzo portion of the sidewalk was constructed by it under a permit from the City; that during the time the work was being done city inspectors made inspection and examination thereof; that the work was approved by the inspectors.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 789, 359 Mo. 607, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-north-mehornay-furniture-co-mo-1949.