King v. City of St. Louis

157 S.W. 498, 250 Mo. 501, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 498 (King v. City of St. Louis) 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
King v. City of St. Louis, 157 S.W. 498, 250 Mo. 501, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 168 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Suing for $15,000 for personal injuries, plaintiff, a widow aged fifty years, had a verdict for $1157.09, and defendant on due steps appeals from the judgment thereon.

It is alleged in the petition, denied in the answer (and proved at the trial) that on a brick sidewalk on one of defendant’s public streets, to-wit, Garrison avenue, on the 6th day of December, 1908, there was a hole, a sort of pitfall, of a width and depth to cause footmen to stumble or step therein and be hurt; that it existed for such length of time as to bring home notice to defendant; and that after nightfall on said date plaintiff walked on said sidewalk and, stepping into said hole, fell, thereby breaking her right leg, dislocating her right' ankle (a lateral dislocation) and somewhat injuring' her left hip and leg. It is also alleged in the petition, denied in the answer (and proved at the trial) that she was permanently disabled and, considering her age, will, it is likely, always be a cripple and suffer pain. It is alleged in the answer, but not shown at the trial, that her injuries were caused by her own negligence contributing thereto. It is undisputed that plaintiff paid out fifteen dollars for medicines and $100 for medical attendance. It is undisputed that she was made unconscious by her fall and consequent injuries; that she was caried to her house some distance away, by those who found her in that plight and by those of her own household who received word and went for her; that therefrom she was confined to her bed for about six weeks and then used crutches for nine or ten months; and, from about an [507]*507hour after her injury, for four or five months thereafter, was regularly under a doctor’s care and from thence onward to the date of the trial had been under his treatment and in consultation with him at intervals on account of her yet visible injuries.

Defendant made no attempt to controvert the fact of plaintiff’s fall or the extent of her pains and hurts, nor to controvert her medical testimony showing that, for one of her age, they were permanent, nor her lay testimony that by standing for any length of time about her household duties her ankle pains and swelling returned to her.

There was, however, a sharp dispute on the existence of any hole at all in the sidewalk; but there was testimony (and much of it) on her behalf that several bricks were out of the sidewalk, and that their absence made a dangerous hole for several weeks before her injury. Moreover, it is not now contended by defendant that the state of the proof is such that an appellate court has any call to meddle with her verdict on that issue of fact. The case, then, may proceed on the theory that her injuries and defendant’s negligence were submitted on substantial proofs and good instructions and found against defendant.

We are asked to reverse the judgment and remand the cause on the grounds following:

(1) Because of the introduction of certain testimony tending to show that other accidents had hap-pended at the same hole.

(2) Because the withdrawal of the evidence on that score (which happened) did not heal the error.

(3) Because her instruction on the measure of damages was erroneous.

We will recur to pertinent parts of the petition, evidence and rulings in connection with a discussion of those grounds for reversal.

In our opinion there is no reversible error in the case. This because:

[508]*508I. Of alleged error in admitting testimony (and herein of whether the withdrawal of the same cured sv,ch error).

With a witness (Lynas) on the stand, on direct examination the following occurred, of which alone the foregoing assignment of error is predicated:

‘ ‘ Q. Will you tell the jury the condition in which you saw the hole then? A. Well, I had been doing some work at the Morgan street address and was returning home to Oliye street with a tool box on my shoulder. The box had some wrenches and pretty heavy tools in it, and naturally I would watch how I would carry the box more than the sidewalk, for fear of striking somebody with the box on my shoulder, and I stepped into this hole and tripped and fell flat, and spoke about the hole being in the sidewalk to my wife when I got home.
“Objected to. Objection sustained.
“Mr. Baird: I ask to have the testimony stricken out as to his falling in the hole.
“The Court: What he told his wife will be stricken out.
“Mr. Baird: Well, I ask to have the other testimony stricken out to the effect that he had fallen in the hole three weeks prior to this time.
“Mr. Taylor: I withdraw that.
“The Court: Well, it may be stricken out.”

It will be observed, in the first place, that the answer of the witness was not at all responsive to the question asked by respondent’s counsel; in the second place, that when that answer was objected to the objection was promptly sustained; in the third place, when a motion was made to strike out the testimony it was also promptly sustained; in the fourth place, respondent’s attorney withdrew the testimony; in the fifth place (which is closer home) no exception was taken to any ruling in the premises; in the sixth place, no further ruling was requested; and, seventhly, to [509]*509cap the climax, no complaint was made in the motion for a new trial of any error in the regard in hand.

To reverse a judgment when the alleged error was not the fault of respondent hut that of a witness— whose tongue was hung in the middle and wagged at both ends — when appellant’s objection was sustained, when appellant’s motion to strike out the alleged improper matter was also sustained, when, to crown all, respondent did all she could do to rectify the matter by withdrawing it from the jury, when no exception was taken below or further ruling asked, and when no error on that score is complained of in the motion for a new trial, would be to fly in the face of all precedent and the good sense of the thing.

This ruling disposes of the point.

But we allow ourselves an observation or two more. Thus: It is argued that testimony of other accidents at the place, from the same cause, is incompetent. That argument is followed up by another to the effect that the damage to defendant’s side of the case was irretrievable after the lips of the witness let fall the disclosure of his fall at the hole. It was in the nature of unpardonable sin. As to which we say: The question whether such evidence is admissible is a mooted one. Irreconcilable views are held by courts of different jurisdictions, and this court has not been able to hold an even and uniform voice thereon. In Goble v. Kansas City, 148 Mo. l. c. 475 et seq., it was ruled one way, and in Charlton v. Railroad, 200 Mo. l. c. 442, without our attention being called to the Goble case, it was ruled (with some diffidence and under the phrase “it seems”) the other. It may be, therefore, that the law in that regard is in a formative state and that the final word has not yet been spoken. Accordingly, when some case comes here turning on the point and calling for new exposition, we can deal with the philosophy of the thing in the light of precedent and settle it. In this case the assignment of error is dis[510]

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 498, 250 Mo. 501, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1913.