Haynes v. Town of Trenton

108 Mo. 123
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 108 Mo. 123 (Haynes v. Town of Trenton) 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
Haynes v. Town of Trenton, 108 Mo. 123 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

This is an action for damages alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence in maintaining a defective sidewalk and leaving a dangerous excavation alongside of the walk, into which the plaintiff was precipitated, and his leg broken, on the night of the twelfth of January, 1888, about seven -o’clock, P. M.

The defense was a general denial and contributory negligence. The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that on the evening in question he -attempted to pass over a crossing which the city had placed over a ditch dug alongside of the street, and ■extending under the sidewalk. He fell over into the hole, and caught his foot between the rocks in its bottom, and broke his leg; that he was confined to his house two months and more; that two bones were broken; that the injury was very painful, and he had not recovered entirely at the trial; that he was earning $40 a month when hurt; that it was fourteen weeks and five days before he could work. He also offered evidence tending to show the crossing was out of repair; that it was springy; that the hole adjoining and under [128]*128the crossing was twenty inches deep, and had loose rock in the bottom; that it was thirty-five inches wide ; that the walk had been in this condition for a year prior to the accident; that plaintiff stepped off the boards into the hole.

On the part of the defendant, there was evidence that the plaintiff had made contradictory statements as to how he sustained the injury.

Aaron Bange testified that the plaintiff told him he stepped upon a pile of rock at the end of the sidewalk, and it turned and he fell. He said nothing about a hole. The rock was at the east end of. the crossing. He said the rock turned with him.

Hughes testified that the plaintiff pointed out to-him the place he was hurt, and it was ten or fifteen feet west of the culvert. Bain and Maggard testified to statements- varying from the plaintiff’s evidence. As to the cause of the accident, the defendant offered evidence that the plaintiff was looking backwards at a party in a sleigh, and, while so doing, walked off the sidewalk and fell. This was shown both by witnesses who saw him, and by his declarations.

As to the character of injury, Dr. Collier testified he was called to see Haynes ; found an injury in his leg. His leg was fractured ; the small bone was broken, and a partial fracture of large bone; leg was much swollen; set the bone. It was two months before he got out. The injury, he thought, was permanent. His ankle was stiff before the fracture. On cross-examination, he stated he had not seen the leg before this accident. Could not tell how much of the swelling was caused by the former injury. He said, “You can always detect where a bone has been fractured.”

The plaintiff, in his own behalf, said he was. wounded in his ankle by a shell in the battle of Glasgow, Missouri, in 1864. The shell injury never hurt him after it got well, save to cause a hitch in his walk. [129]*129Ankle was not swollen from shell wound. He contradicted all the witnesses as to his statements. Denied that he told Bitts that he would have a fat thing if he could get damages off the town, his pension and insurance. He had no recollection of having told the surgeons who composed the pension board, when they examined him for a pension, that he experienced no difficulty from the hurt from falling off the sidewalk, and that all his injury came from the shell wound. The accident for which he sued happened January 12, 1888. In May, 1888, he was examined for a pension.

Two of the board, Drs. Patton and Hendrickson, testified that they examined him in May, and his leg was in same condition then as at the trial. The ankle was stiff. Plaintiff told them at that time it was caused by the shell wound at Glasgow in 1864. “ I told him,” said Dr. Patton, ‘ ‘ to draw the line as to how much of the injury belonged to the shell and how much to the breaking of the leg.” He said the injury from the break was above the ankle. The damage suit was then pending. He said all the injury to the ankle was caused by the shell. Hendrickson testified to the same statement. Dr. Hendrickson, K. G. Smith, Dr. Burén and Dr. Bristow all testified they had examined the plaintiff’s leg, and could find no evidence that the bones had ever been fractured.

The court gave and refused a number of instructions, but it is unnecessary to incumber this opinion with them as the defendant only assigns as error here the giving of the fifth instruction asked by the plaintiff, the refusal of the sixth instruction asked by the defendant, and in modifying and giving the same as amended by the court; misconduct of the plaintiff’s attorney, in making statements to. the jury not supported by the evidence, in defiance of the admonition of the court, and over objections of the defendant’s counsel, and because the verdict is .excessive.

[130]*130I. The plaintiff averred in his petition that he was injured by being precipitated into the unguarded excavation and having his right foot caught between two rocks, and, by reason thereof, his leg was broken. No one saw the accident. So we have the plaintiff’s own version of it. He alleged he was hurt in this manner, and he testified on the trial that he was hurt as he had charged it.

In his fifth instruction, he asked the court to charge the jury that, “if the plaintiff, while passing over said walk in the night time and exercising ordinary care, was by reason of said unsafe condition of said walk as aforesaid precipitated or fell from said walk onto some rock in the street adjoining said walk by reason of which plaintiff sustained great injury, then the jury should .find for the plaintiff the full amount of the injury sustained, and in such case the liability of the defendant does not depend upon the depth of the hole or excavation at the point where plaintiff alleges he was injured or whether there was in fact any such hole or excavation.”

Appellant complains that this instruction wholly ignores the issue made by the pleadings. Counsel for plaintiff insists that it was permissible because one ground of the negligence charged was the insecure sidewalk.

The purpose of a petition is to advise the court and the adversary party of plaintiff’s claim. This court has always given a liberal construction to pleadings under the code, but it has sternly set its face against the attempt to sue on one cause of action and recover on another. Now, it is apparent to any candid person that plaintiff in his petition intended the court and defendant to understand that he was injured by the concurrence of two negligent omissions of defendant, to-wit, the insecure sidewalk and the dangerous excavation left uncovered by it. It was competent for plaintiff to have pimply charged that he, without fault of his own, fell [131]*131on account of the defects in the sidewalk, and was injured, and that defendant either knew or was bound to know of this defective condition. But he was not content with this. He charges a distinct negligent omission in leaving the dangerous excavation adjoining it, and informs us that he was not hurt until his foot was caught between rocks in the bottom of that ditch, but, being so caught, he “careened,” and his leg was broken. Evidently he meant the court should be advised that he was thus hurt, and in no other way, at this place and no other. But he did not stop here. He went upon the stand, and testified to the facts necessary to make this specific case.

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Bluebook (online)
108 Mo. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynes-v-town-of-trenton-mo-1891.