Leathem v. Longenecker

405 S.W.2d 873, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 699
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 12, 1966
Docket51612
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 405 S.W.2d 873 (Leathem v. Longenecker) 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
Leathem v. Longenecker, 405 S.W.2d 873, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 699 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

JOHN J. WOLFE, Special Judge.

This is an action by Fannie Leathern to recover damages she sustained by reason of personal injuries. She was employed by the defendants to do house cleaning. While engaged in this work she fell from the porch of defendants’ house with resulting injuries for which she seeks $25,000 damages. She charged that her fall was caused by a defective doorsill on the porch. George Leathern is her husband and he joins in the action seeking damages for loss of his wife’s services. There was a verdict and judgment for the defendants and the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal. They contend that the court erroneously *874 refused four verdict directing instructions they offered.

Plaintiff Fannie Leathern started working for the defendants in August, 1962. She worked for them one day a week for four or five hours. Both of the defendants were employed and consequently Fannie Leathern was alone in the house as she worked. When she arrived at the defendants’ home on January 3, 1963, Mrs. Longenecker had not yet left for work, Before leaving she told Mrs. Leathern that the vacuum cleaner bag should be emptied. She gave no directions as to how this should be done. The vacuum cleaner was the tank type and the tank contained a bag to catch the sweepings. Plaintiff Mrs. Leath-ern took the bag out and emptied its contents into a trash container in the kitchen. There was still some dust in the bag and in order to shake this out she went out on a back porch upon which the kitchen door opened.

The porch was on the west side of the house near the southwest corner. It appears from photographs in evidence to have been about four feet above the ground. It rested upon concrete “piers.” Upon the “piers” the rim joists of the porch rested. These were 2 x 8’s and there were also supporting floor joists. The porch measured only five feet along the west side and four feet on the south side. It was enclosed on the west side by a lattice and on the south side it had a screen door that opened out to steps leading to the ground. There was a handrail on the east side of the steps but none on the west side. The porch had a roof slanting to the west. The flooring was made of 1 x 4 yellow pine, tongue and groove boards. The sill under the screen door was the same as the floor boards but it was about one-half inch wider than the other floor boards. It was nailed to the south supporting 2x8 main joist but it projected beyond the joist for one and one-half inches slightly above and over the top tread of the porch steps.

Mrs. Leathern testified that she took the vacuum cleaner bag out to the porch with the intention of shaking the dust that remained in it out into the yard below. She did not intend to go down the porch stairs to shake the dust out. It was her intention to open the porch door and shake the bag from a position in the doorway. She had the bag in her right hand so she pushed the screen open with her left hand. As the door was hinged on her right she was turned somewhat as she pushed it open. She described her posture as follows: “ * * * I had my right foot up close because I was kinda standing a little bit sideways because there wasn’t nothing to hold the screen back. And I had the sweeper bag in my right hand and I had hold of the door facing with my left hand and I just let the screen door come to kinda on my shoulder and I was just reaching out shaking it like that. (Indicating.)”

She said she was standing with her right foot projecting over the sill about one inch or one and one-half inches but her right heel was on the hoard behind the sill. Her left foot was behind the sill board. She said that as she was in this position “ * * it felt like something went down and just give so it throwed me forward.” She was asked if that was what caused her to fall and her answer was “Yes.” She fell into the yard below and suffered fractures of the left leg and ankle and a dislocated shoulder. She managed to get back into the house and telephoned Mrs. Longenecker. Mrs. Longenecker called an ambulance, had it sent to the house, and Mrs. Leathern was taken to a hospital.

Mrs. Leathern was accustomed to the use of the porch. She swept it each time she worked there and at times opened the screen door to sweep the dirt out. She also went up and down the back steps each time she worked there. She never noticed anything wrong with the doorsill. The plaintiffs called a builder as an expert witness. He had examined the porch over a year and a half after the plaintiff fell. He testified that the sill board had an old split in it. He *875 said that the split looked like it had been there for several years. He said that he weighed 250 pounds and when he put his weight on the overhanging part of the board it went down a quarter of an inch. He did not measure the distance it went down but estimated it. A witness for the defendants said that the board depressed one-eighth of an inch under his own weight and one-sixteenth of an inch with the weight of Mrs. Longenecker. The Chief Building Inspector for the City of Joplin also called by the defendants testified that the porch structure was sound.

There was evidence that Mrs. Leathern had said that she did not know what caused her to fall. She had stated in answer to interrogatories; “ * * * ‘I Was attempting to get out the screen door of the back porch to empty a vacuum sweeper bag. My right foot caught in the doorway, I tripped and fell forward down the back steps and on to the ground. I tried to catch the screen door with my left hand but could not.’ ” When she was confronted with this answer on the witness stand she testified, “Well, I was definitely not attempting to get out of the door.”

The defendants both testified that the doorsill did not go down when stepped upon and Mr. Longenecker said that you almost had to jump on it to get it to give at all. They used the stairs and the door both before and after plaintiff’s fall and found nothing wrong with it.

The only points asserted here are that the trial court erred in refusing to give certain verdict directing instructions on behalf of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs offered and the court gave two verdict directing instructions, one on behalf of Mrs. Leathern covering her claim under Count I of the petition, and another covering Mr. Leathern’s claim for loss of services under Count 2 of the petition. These were designated Nos. 2 and 3.

Instruction No. 2 was:

“Your verdict must be for the plaintiff Fannie Leathern upon Count I of the petition if you believe:
“First, there was an unstable door sill upon back porch floor which door sill of the screen door of the porch leading to the outside steps of defendants’ dwelling was not reasonably safe for defendants’ employee, and
“Second, plaintiff Fannie Leathern did not know and by using ordinary care could not have known of this condition, and
“Third, defendants knew or by using ordinary care could have known of this condition, and
“Fourth, defendants failed to use ordinary care to repair it, and
“Fifth, as a direct result of such failure, plaintiff Fannie Leathern was injured.”

Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
405 S.W.2d 873, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leathem-v-longenecker-mo-1966.