Harakas v. Dickie

23 S.W.2d 651, 224 Mo. App. 171, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 70
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 651 (Harakas v. Dickie) 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
Harakas v. Dickie, 23 S.W.2d 651, 224 Mo. App. 171, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 70 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

Action by George Harakas, a minor, by Pete Harakas, his father and next friend, to recover damages for personal injuries. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for defendants, whereupon plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit, with leave to move to set the same aside. Plaintiff appealed froml the order and judgment of the court overruling his motion to set aside the involuntary nonsuit.

The scene of the accident in question- was large apartment building at the southwest corner of Sixteenth Street and The Paseo in Kansas City, Missouri. Although physically connected, the entire building was comprised of a number of distinct units or apartments, each unit being three stories in height. Each unit had a separate front entrance. Some four or five units faced north on Sixteenth Street between the Paseo and an alley to the west thereof, while the others faced upon the Paseo. At the rear of each unit was a common stairway to serve the three apartments of such unit and porches at each floor thereof, with railings enclosing the porches and stairway. The rear building line of the apartment was not uniform. The rear of the apartment unit abutting the alley on Sixteenth Street and the rear porches thereof (upon which the plaintiff was injured) extended some twenty to forty feet south of the rear of the other apartment units and porches on Sixteenth Street (in one of which plaintiff and his family resided). The apartment in which plaintiff lived had no connection with, nor access to, the porches upon which he claims he was injured. Plaintiff and his family lived in the fourth apartment from the alley. Steps' lead up from the ground to approximately three feet from the center of the porch on the first floor. From there steps lead westward up approximately six feet to a landing between the first and second floors. A “U” turn is.then made and steps placed against the building itself lead eastward and upward approximately five and one-half or six feet to the floor of the porch on the second floor. The porches are enclosed with a wooden railing consisting or a two by four inch top rail, and a one by four inch bottom rail, each fastened to vertical uprights. At the second floor the timbers forming the railing about the porch are carried west and north *173 apparently for symmetry and architectural effect to enclose the stairway well. These timbers were not so placed for any protective purpose, as they could not be used, brushed against or touched by anyone using the stairs or porches for any ordinary or contemplated use.

The testimony of plaintiff discloses that he and his family had moved into one of the interior apartments on November 3, 1924,—five days before the accident in question occurred. On November 8, 1924, the seven-year-old sister and the three-year-old brother of plaintiff finished their supper and went out back of the apartment building to play with the Pares children who lived in one of the apartments. The two Pares boys and the brother of appellant went up the stairs to the second floor of the apartment in question to borrow a basket ball belonging to a boy living there. When next noticed, the three-year-old brother of plaintiff was lying lengthwise upon a railing across the west side of the stairway enclosure and ivas crying. This railing was a continuation of the next to the top railing about the porch on the second floor and was approximately seven or eight feet above the landing between the first and second floors. It could not be reached or touched by plaintiff and his brother from any part of the porches or stairs or from the landing between the first and second floors. No one else testified to seeing the boy get upon the railing where his sister noticed him, and the only way he could have gotten there was by going to the second floor, then crawling westward along the railing to the corner post and then northward along the continuation of this railing. When the sister noticed him, she called to his twelve-year-old brother who was just coming out of the back door of their apartment. He ran tip the steps to the first landing and climbed up the corner post to reach the place where his brother was lying. As he had his right arm about the top rail and was attempting to push his little brother inside, the top rail gave way and plaintiff fell to the alley below. The railing which gave way was eight feet above the landing between the first and second floors and could not be reached or touched by anyone using the porch or stairs in the usual and customary manner. It was not there for any protective purpose for people using the stairs, landings and porches.

Over defendants’ objection, plaintiff was permitted to introduce testimony to the effect that the general condition of the porches, steps and railings was old and defective and that the railings were rotted, weak and shaky. Also that children frequently had been seen climbing up and down the steps, corner posts and railings, banisters, coal sheds in the rear and "all around everywhere.”

Plaintiff’s first contention is that it was the duty of defendants, as landlords, to keep the porches and railings which were used in common by the tenants of the apartment, in a reasonably safe condition of repair for the use of such tenants and other persons ¿s *174 might use the porches and railings for any legitimate or lawful purpose.

The evidence shows that the porch from which plaintiff fell was not used in common by all tenants of the entire building. However, it is shown that the apartment building, although one structure, consisted of units, each unit being three stories high, and the porch in question served one of these units, and was used in common by all of the tenants occupying such unit. As the porch was so used by all tenants occupying the unit of the apartment which the porch served, it was under the control of defendants, whether such control was evidenced by express reservation or implied from such common use. [Miller v. Gesser, 193 Mo. App. 1, 19-20.] Other authorities might be cited, but the law as above announced is so well settled that we will not lengthen this opinion by citation or discussion of other eases. The porches being under the control of defendants, it was their duty to exercise reasonable care to keep them reasonably safe for the use of tenants and other persons for the purposes for which they were intended.

The next questions presented in the determination of appellant’s contentions are, (1) Did appellant’s brother, not living in this unit of the apartment building, have a lawful right to use the porch, and (2) If so, was he using it for a purpose or in a manner which the landlord actually or impliedly intended it to be used! The evidence shows plaintiff’s brother and sister went to the back yard of the apartment for the purpose of playing with the Pares children who lived in one of the apartments. The two Pares boys and plaintiff’s brother went up the stairs to the second floor of the porch for the purpose of borrowing a basket ball which belonged to another boy living in one of the apartments on the second floor. This was a legitimate use of the porch stairs. Plaintiff’s brother had a lawful right to use the porch and stairs for the purpose of going to the neighbor boy’s apartment to borrow a ball or for any other legitimate purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 651, 224 Mo. App. 171, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harakas-v-dickie-moctapp-1929.