Jensen v. Kansas City

238 S.W.2d 305, 361 Mo. 967
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1951
Docket41953
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 238 S.W.2d 305 (Jensen v. Kansas City) 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
Jensen v. Kansas City, 238 S.W.2d 305, 361 Mo. 967 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

VAN OSDOL, C.

[ 305] In this tort action the jury returned a verdict awarding $8500 to plaintiff who had suffered injury when she fell on a sidewalk in Kansas City. The- defendant municipality, City of Kansas City, has perfected an appeal from the ensuing judgment.

Plaintiff fell and was injured when she and her daughter were walking southwardly on the concrete sidewalk along the east side of Barat Street — she fell at a point in front of the property numbered 333, fronting on that street. At that point the growth of the root of a tree near the west side of the walk had broken the walk and raised .a segment of the concrete three or four inches above the elevation of the walk’s normal surface- level. Plaintiff slipped or caught her foot “on that broken piece of the broken sidewalk” and fell forward-full length with her left leg doubled under her.

*969 Defendant-appellant City assigns error in an instruction, Instruction No. 1, given at the request of plaintiff; and defendant-appellant [306] further contends the jury’s award 'was excessive.

Plaintiff had alleged defendant City had failed to “exercise ordinary care to maintain the sidewalk in front of No. 333 Barat Street - - - in a reasonably safe condition for public use.” -It was alleged that, as a result of such negligence, “said sidewalk became broken, in a state of upheaval, with a ridge its entire width and with segments projecting upwardly - - -.” Defendant City pleaded contributory negligence of plaintiff in failing to use her senses in selecting the course she was pursuing.

Introductory and necessary to our examination of contentions relating to Instruction No. 1, we parenthetically note a mistake on the part of plaintiff in the introduction of evidence. Plaintiff in her case-in-chief introduced into evidence her Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, photographs purporting to portray the defective condition of City’s walk in front of No. 333 Barat Street where she was injured. These exhibits were pictures of a defect in some sidewalk, the location of which 'walk is not disclosed in the record; but the exhibits were honestly, though mistakenly, introduced into evidence by plaintiff as the pictures of the defect in the walk which caused plaintiff’s fall. Defendant City introduced its Exhibits A, B and C, no doubt actual portrayals' of the place of plaintiff’s injury. ‘ .

There is a remarkable similarity in the appearance of the defect in a sidewalk shown in Exhibits 1, 2 and 3 and that shown in Exhibits A, B and C. No objection was interposed to the introduction of any of the six exhibits; and counsel for plaintiff and defendant, and the trial judge had not discovered during the trial that plaintiff’s Exhibits 1, 2 and 3 were not taken at the actual place of the injury, that is, in front of No. 333 Barat Street. However, a stone wall near the edge of a sidewalk is to be seen in the pictures, plaintiff’s Exhibits 1, 2 and 3; and there is no stone wall shown in defendant’s Exhibits A, B and C. The jury, while considering their verdict, made inquiry of the trial judge “as to why a wall appears in Plaintiff’s exhibits and does not appear in Defendant’s exhibits.” In answering.the inquiry, the trial judge stated, “These pictures have been offered in evidence without any objection whatever. It has been- conceded by the parties in effect by making no objections or offering any counter evidence that they do correctly show the sidewalk where the accident occurred; so the part about the wall is of no consequence anyway.” It seems to us the strange inadvertence in the introduction of the exhibits, whereby plaintiff introduced photographs verified by her as “reasonably good pictures” of the walk at the place she was injured, could have had but the same effect as if plaintiff had introduced into evidence a drawing or diagram verified *970 by a witness as being a fair representation of tbe walk’s condition at tbe place she was injured.

By Instruction No. 1 the jury was advised,

- - that, if you find and believe from the evidence that the sidewalk on the east side of B'arat Street, in the 300 block, was,' on or about the 10th day of August, 1948, a public sidewalk, and was in an unsafe and dangerous condition for travel thereon by the public, if so, by reason of a break or depression in said walk (if you find there was a break or depression in said walk), and that a sufficient length of time had elapsed between the time said sidewalk became unsafe and dangerous (if you believe it was) and the time of the alleged injury to plaintiff, for the defendant Kansas City, by the exercise of ordinary diligence and care", to have discovered and repaired said sidewalk before the time of the alleged accident, and if the jury further believe from the evidence that the plaintiff on or about said date was traveling along and over said sidewalk and was exercising ordinary care for her own safety, and that, while passing along and over said sidewalk at said point, she was caused to fall'upon said walk and injured by reason of the unsafe and dangerous condition of said'walk, if so, then the jury is instructed that your verdict must be for the plaintiff, Mrs. Jensen, and against the defendant, Kansas City.”

Defendant-appellant City urges the instruction hypothesized that plaintiff, while passing along and over the sidewalk “at [307] said point” was caused to fall, but ignored and did not hypothesize the point as being in front of No. 333 Barat Street as stated in plaintiff’s petition, and consequently the instruction was broader than the pleadings, the jury being authorized to find for plaintiff if she fell and defendant was negligent in the maintenance of the walk at any point in the “300 block” on Barat Street; that the instruction hypothesized “a break or depression” in the walk, whereas the petition alleged that the walk was “broken, in a state of upheaval, with a ridge - - - and with segments projecting upwardly - - -,” and so the instruction, it is argued, was erroneous in hypothesizing a different kind of defect than the one alleged in the petition; and that the instruction containing the erroneous hypothesis authorizing recovery for any defect in the 300 block was further erroneous in hypothesizing that defendant City, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have timely discovered and repaired the walk, because the jury, having been permitted to consider a defect anywhere within the “300 block,” was left to speculate upon how long the defect had existed. These asserted faults in the instruction, it is-said, were especially prejudicial because of the mistakenly introduced Exhibits 1, 2 and 3.

Appellant City, citing Degonia v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co., 224 Mo. 564, 123 S. W. 807; State ex rel. Central Coal & Coke Co. v. *971 Ellison, 270 Mo. 645, 195 S. W. 722; Rucker v. Alton R. Co., 343 Mo. 929, 123 S. W. 2d 24, urges an instruction must be within the purview both of the pleadings and the evidence. And-an instruction should not authorize a verdict on a charge of negligence, which a plaintiff’s evidence shows has no causal connection with his injury. Carlisle v. Tilghmon, Mo. Sup., 159 S. W. 2d 663.

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238 S.W.2d 305, 361 Mo. 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-kansas-city-mo-1951.