Kerby v. Schindell

146 S.W.2d 670, 235 Mo. App. 691, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 23
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 670 (Kerby v. Schindell) 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
Kerby v. Schindell, 146 S.W.2d 670, 235 Mo. App. 691, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 23 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

*693 BLAND, J.

This is an .'action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $500. However, the court granted defendant a new trial on the ground that it erred in giving plaintiff’s Instruction No. One. Plaintiff has appealed.

The facts show that plaintiff, on August 18, 1938, received a third degree burn to her right forearm while buying meat in defendant’s meat market in Kansas City, when her arm came in contact with a hot metal plate on the top of defendant’s showcase.

The showcase in question was mechanically refrigerated. The temperature was automatically controlled and was kept therein at 4Q degrees in both summer and winter. The case was electrically illuminated by means of light bulbs placed in shallow cabinets made by glass inserted between the top of the case and the meat compartment therein.. There were four of these cabinets four and one-half inches wide and sixteen inches long and each had a perforated brass plate in the wooden top of the case. These perforated plates afforded radiation for the heat generated by the light bulbs below. The defendant had owned the meat market eighteen months prior to the time when plaintiff was injured but the meat case had been in the store, in the same condition for approximately ten years prior to the time of the casualty.

Plaintiff testified that she went to the meat shop to buy some meat and the butcher, one Puhr, standing behind the meat counter, showed her two pieces and she was burned while pointing to the piece she desired, her bare forearm coming in contact with one- of the brass plates on the top of the display case. Defendant was standing nearby and after plaintiff stated that her arm had been burned he said to Puhr: “I told you to keep that covered before somebody got burned.” Most of the times'when plaintiff had been in the *694 meat market before there were trays of sweet pickles or peanut butter covering the brass plates, “different kinds of stuff.” Plaintiff testified that she did not know that the brass plate in question was so hot as to burn her arm and that no one in the market warned her about the matter.

Parts of defendant’s deposition was introduced in evidence. In his deposition he stated that he had felt the brass plates on occasions and that they were “very warm.”

Mr. Puhr, testifying for the defendant, stated that he had worked at the meat market for ten years and that in the winter time the doors of the market were not closed until the cold got down to ten degrees or under and the butchers used the brass plates in the winter time to warm their hands; that they would place their hands “right down on it” but none of them was ever burned and that he had never heard of any complaint of any one being burned by any of the brass plates.

Defendant testified that each cabinet Under the brass plates was equipped with two twenty-five watt light bulbs; that the plates were not “very warm;” that “they were warm but not hot enough to burn anybody; ’ ’ that they were not dangerous; that he did not know or did he ever hear of anyone getting burned on one of the plates and did not know that the plates would burn a human arm or that they were in any way dangerous.

Plaintiff’s Instruction No. One told the jury that if it found that the brass plates were; hot and such condition rendered them “unsafe and dangerous to persons coming into contact therewith” and plaintiff came into contact with one of them and burned her .arm “and if you further find and believe from the evidence that the defendant knew or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known that said brass plates or strips along the top of said showcase were hot, if so, in sufficient time prior to the occurrence referred herein to have remedied the same, if so, and defendant could by the, exercise of ordinary care have warned plaintiff of said unsafe and dangerous condition (if you find that said condition was unsafe and dangerous) and have thus and thereby prevented plaintiff’s injuries, if you so find, and that defendant negligently failed so to do, if so, and .that as a direct and proximate result of defendant’s negligence, if any, plaintiff’s right arm was burned and injured, if so, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff and against the defendant.”

Plaintiff’s Instruction No. Two told the jury: “ ‘Negligence’ and ‘Negligently’ as used in these instructions, means the failure to exercise ordinary care. ‘Ordinary care’ as used in these instructions, means that degree of care exercised by an ordinarily prudent person under like or similar circumstances.’ ”

Defendant, in his brief, urges tha.t plaintiff’s Instruction No. One constituted error for the reason that, although plaintiff was a business invitee defendant was not an insurer of the safety of his customers *695 but was liable to plaintiff only upon a finding, by the jury, that the plate was dangerously hot and that defendant had actual or constructive notice of its dangerously hot condition a reasonable length of time before the occurrence of the casualty to have offered him an opportunity to remove or warn of its presence. The duty thus stated by the defendant is not disputed by the plaintiff and we may assume that it is properly set forth by him. However, defendant says that the instruction nowhere requires an affirmative finding by the jury that defendant had knowledge, either actual or constructive, of the dangerous condition of the brass plate in question and that the instruction, by the use of the words “that defendant knew . . . that said brass strips or plates . . . were hot” does not submit that he knew that they were dangerously hot.

The words quoted, standing alone, do not submit knowledge of defendant of the dangerous condition of the plates' and we may assume that the instruction would have been erroneous if they were the only words in the instruction bearing on the subject. However, the instruction, in its first part, requires the jury to find that the plates were dangerously hot and after the words, last quoted from the instruction, the jury was required to find,, that the defendant had the opportunity to remedy the condition and have warned plaintiff “of said unsafe condition” and “negligently failed to do so and as a direct and proximate result of defendant’s negligence” plaintiff Avas injured.

It is difficult to see how a jury, under all of *the facts in this case, could find that defendant could have negligently failed to warn plaintiff of the unsafe and dangerous condition unless he knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care, could have known of such unsafe and dangerous condition. That part of the instruction, submitting negligent failure to warn plaintiff of the unsafe and dangerous condition, standing by itself, no doubt was sufficient to submit that defendant had actual or constructive knowledge that the plate Avas dangerous hot. [Messing v. Judge & Dolph Drug Co., 322 Mo. 901, 923, 924; Simmons v. Kansas City Jockey Club, 334 Mo. 99, 109; Kamer v. Mo. Kans. & Texas R. R. Co., 326 Mo. 792; Hulsey v. Quarry Constr. Co., 326 Mo. 194; Berberet v. Elec. Park Amusement Co., 319 Mo. 275, 279.]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ward v. Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company
352 S.W.2d 413 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 670, 235 Mo. App. 691, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerby-v-schindell-moctapp-1941.