Katz v. North Kansas City Development Co.

258 S.W. 752, 215 Mo. App. 662, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 77
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 752 (Katz v. North Kansas City Development 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
Katz v. North Kansas City Development Co., 258 S.W. 752, 215 Mo. App. 662, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 77 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, P. J.

Defendant owns and operates a warehouse known as the Burnley Building in North Kansas City. Plaintiff’s husband fell down an elevator shaft therein and was killed. She brought this action to recover damages alleging that his death was caused by *666 defendant’s negligence. The jury returned a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $3000 • and defendant has appealed.

The petition charged that:

(a) “although the elevator opening or shaft through which the deceased fell was on the first floor and in the south end of the building and about midway from the east wall to the west wall and where customers, including the plaintiff, would pass when entering or leaving, said building, yet the defendant carelessly and negligently failed to have said place in and around said elevator reasonably sufficiently lighted and negligently left or permitted the entrance to said elevator to be opened and unguarded and by reason thereof it was not reasonably safe.”

(b) “although the opening in said elevator shaft was along and near other openings or doors along the south wall of said building and although the interior of the shaft of said elevator was enclosed and dark, and although there was a regular passageway along said opening which defendant allowed, invited and permitted its customers and employees to use said elevator and td pass along said place and knew that- such persons passed in dangerous proximity to said elevator opening, and defendant maintained metal doors at said elevator opening for the purpose of closing and guarding the same, yet the defendant carelessly and negligently caused or allowed the doors to said elevator opening to be open and the same to be unguarded when it knew or by the exercise of ordinary care might have known that said place was not reasonably safe when said doors were open and said shaft unguarded.”

(c) “although it is the usual and general custom to have such elevator openings barricaded or equipped with doors and the doors thereof closed when the elevator is not at such opening, yet the defendant carelessly and negligently caused or allowed the doors to said elevator to be open at the first floor thereof at a time when the *667 plaintiff’s deceased fell therein although the elevator had been moved and was higher up in the shaft when it knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known that by reason of such facts said place was not reasonably safe.”

(d) “although said opening was where customers would pass and was near other openings or doors and said place was not sufficiently lighted and the entrance thereof was open and not barricaded, yet the defendant negligently failed to have any light or warning or sign to indicate that said opening was into an elevator shaft and by reason thereof the same was dangerous and not reasonably safe.”

(e) “ although the defendant allowed and invited its customers to use said elevator in going from floor to floor and said customers would use said elevator by getting thereon and setting the same in motion by pulling on the cable, yet the defendant had the elevator shaft painted a dark or black color and failed to maintain any light in said shaft and by reason thereof it was difficult to discover the absence of said elevator in the floor where you desired to enter and by reason thereof the place was dangerous and not reasonably safe.”

The answer was a •general denial coupled with a plea of contributory negligence in that plaintiff’s husband — ■ “knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence on his part, could have ascertained whether or not the elevator was on the first *floor of the building before stepping through the door to the elevator shaft, and was careless in not making any such attempt to do so, without first ascertaining or attempting to ascertain whether the elevator was there or not, and in failing to make- such attempt was negligent as a matter of law. ’ ’

The warehouse is a four-story building 286 feet long, north and south, by 114 feet wide, east and west. Heavy freight and automobiles were stored therein. The office, stairway, entrance doors, and elevators are in the rear or south end of the building. The office, located in the *668 south-east corner, occupied twenty-two feet and nine inches of the width of the building. West of the office was a space twenty-two and one-half feet in width, and opening into this space through the south wall of the building was a-large entrance door. Immediately west of the above' twenty-two and one-half foot space, the freight elevator, passenger elevator and stairway occupied another twenty-two and one-half feet of the width of the building, and immediately west of the freight elevator was a space of twenty-two and one-half feet used for a driveway, and opening into this driveway through the south wall of the building was another large entrance door. The passenger elevator is north of the stairway, the latter being near the south wall of the building, and west of the passenger elevator and stairway, forming the west boundary of both, is a wall and immediately west of this wall is the freight elevator.

As the street was on the west side of the building, many persons, and perhaps most of them, entering the building from the dock would go through the large .entrance west of the freight elevator, pass north to the north side thereof and then turn east along the north sides of the two elevators and go to the office, or, if desiring to use either the passenger elevator or the stairway, would turn and go south along east of the passenger elevator and either enter the elevator or continue on a very short distance south to the stairway.

Outside and south of the south wall of the building is a large loading dock on which automobiles or property for storage could be driven or loaded and then taken into the building through the large door and, on being placed on the freight elevator, could be taken to any floor of the warehouse desired.

Each elevator had gates or doors to its entrance and these were so constructed as to divide into two parts, an upper and lower half. They open at the dividing line between the two halves, the lower half descending until its upper edge was flush with the floor, and the upper half *669 ascending until it was out of the way. When the gate closed, the two halves came together and formed a solid wall, hut sometimes in closing they rehounded a little, leaving a horizontal aperture varying from two to six inches or more wide between the two halves, but as this aperture was half way up the entire height of the door, the opening thus left did not. prevent the door from guarding the entrance to the elevator shaft.

Defendant maintained one man in the warehouse who attended to the work of deciding where freight and automobiles should be stored and of operating the elevators in the building. His name was Storms. Patrons desiring to store freight or automobiles would go into the office to see Storms and get directions from him as to where their property was to be placed, and, accompanied by him, would take the stuff to the designated parts of the building by means of the freight elevator.

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Related

Crain v. Webster Electric Cooperative
568 S.W.2d 781 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1978)
Kellogg v. H. D. Lee Mercantile Co.
160 S.W.2d 838 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1942)
Katz v. North Kansas City Development Co.
14 S.W.2d 701 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 752, 215 Mo. App. 662, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-v-north-kansas-city-development-co-moctapp-1924.