Levin v. Hilliard

266 S.W.2d 573
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1954
Docket43379
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 266 S.W.2d 573 (Levin v. Hilliard) 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
Levin v. Hilliard, 266 S.W.2d 573 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Plaintiff-respondent sought $25,000 as damages for personal injuries sustained as a result of defendants’ alleged negligence. After verdict and-judgment for defendants-appellants, the trial court sustained plaintiff’s new trial motion for the reason: “That the Court erred in permitting the defendant to testify in reference to his opinion as to the cause of the collapse of the porch involved in the evidence for the reason that the defendant was not qualified to give such opinion.” Defendants appealed from the order and contend that the trial court did not err in admitting the testimony and, alternatively, that error, if any, was cured by plaintiff’s cross-examination.

Defendants owned a four-family flat, with up and downstairs wooden porches at the rear. The floor of the upper porch collapsed while plaintiff was on it, causing her to fall to the floor of the lower p.orch. Plaintiff’s instruction, submitting her case, required the jury to find that the braces and supports of the porch had become so rotten and decayed that they caused the porch to collapse, and that defendants knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, of such condition in time to have repaired, but negligently- failed to do so. Defendants’ verdict-directing instruction told the jury in effect that, even though the jury found that the porch collapsed by reason of the failure of the supports and braces referred to. in plaintiff’s instruction, if it further found that the conditions mentioned in plaintiff’s instruction could not have been discovered by defendants prior to the accident by the exercise of ordinary care, the verdict should be for defendants.

Plaintiff adduced evidence that the porch collapsed while she was on it; that she sustained injuries; that the boards of the upper porch floor and some of the stringers and supports were rotten and decayed; and that defendants had notice thereof in time to have repaired. Defendants’ evi *575 dence was to the effect that the braces and supports were not rotten and decayed, at least to the degree described in plaintiff’s evidence, but that any conditions which could have contributed to the collapse of the porch were concealed by molding or trim boards and that defendants' did not and could not in the exercise of ordinary care have discovered such causative conditions. Defendants’ further evidence was to the effect that the original construction of the porch was such that the strain of continued use upon certain nails (madequate as support) and the subsequent shearing or breaking of those nails was the cause of the porch’s collapse, and that the method and manner of the construction of the porch was not discernible to defendants until examination following the accident.

The porch had been in existence for at least 36 years and no structural repairs had been made since 1932. (the nature of the 1932 repairs does not appear). Defendant Ralph Hilliard, assisted by his father-in-law, Mr. Milner, dismantled the porch after the instant accident and constructed a.new porch. The construction of the original upper porch, as discovered by defendant Ralph Hilliard subsequent to the accident, is accurately described by appellant as follows: “The second floor porch was constructed in this manner three boards; or stringers, each 16' x 2" x 8" extended north and south, One of them abutted the wall, one was. at the outer extremity and the third was centrally located between the other two, all. being placed so that the 8" dimensions were vertical. The north ends of the stringers were attached, by nails, to a board 48"x2"x8", which extended east and west, and the south ends were attached, by nails, to a board of like dimensions and direction. Those nails were about 6" long and 3/16 in diameter and had been-driven through the end pieces and into the ends of: the stringers. The east end of each of the end pieces extended into the brick wall about 6”. Those end pieces and the outside stringers were covered on the outside by trim boards. A wedge, of block, consisting of a piece of wood 6" x 2" x 6", had been inserted in the brick wall of the building midway between the ends of the stringer abutting the wall and that stringer was attached to that wedge by nails. There was a piece of 2x8, extending east and west, attached between the stringer at the outer extremity and the center one, and a piece of like material between the center stringer and the one abutting the wall, both pieces being at the center of the porch. The outer stringer rested upon three upright square wooden posts located at the ends and center of it. The lower ends of those posts rested upon the floor. of the lower porch. The floor boards and the boards of the ceiling of the first floor porch extended east and west and were attached to the three stringers, their ends being flush with the brick wall, and concealed the stringers from vievy There was a quarter-round molding around the sides and ends of the ceiling of the first floof porch.” And there may have been such a molding on the second-floor porch.

After the accident, defendant Ralph Hilliard said he determined that the nails which had secured the stringer (which abutted the rear brick wall) to the cross-piece at the north end of the porch had sheared or broken in-half and tvere somewhat rusted; that the north end of the stringer was somewhat deteriorated; and that the nails by. which the stringer was attached to the “block or wedge” did not break but were rusty and pulled out of the block because of the leverage exerted against them when the anchorage at the one. corner gave way that the block, remained in the wall, and that the other corner of the porch did not give way. When Ralph Hilliard and his father-in-law. reconstructed the porch, they placed upright support's or posts at the corners of the porch abutting the brick wall. These posts or supports, as heretpfore noted, had not been included when the porch was originally constructed.

Defendant Ralph Hilliard, on direct examination, was asked “Now, Mr. Hilliard, with reference to the construction of that porch, do you have an opinion as to what caused, this-porch-to fall?” Plaintiff ob *576 jected that the question called for a: conclusion, and that the witness had not been properly qualified. Hilliard was permitted to answer: “I don’t think that the porch that went down was constructed properly, I think it lacked some support, quite a bit.”

Defendants first contend that, despite the fact that the question was so framed as to call for an opinion, the witness’ answer “was based upon his personal observation and constituted a statement of fact and not the expression of a mere opinion.” Cases are cited which support the proposition that, even though a question may be objectionable in form as calling for a conclusion or an opinion, if the answer given is in reality simply a statement of fact based upon what the witness himself observed, the answer is thereby not an opinion or conclusion. The difficulty with defendants’ position, however, is that the answer of the witness in the instant case was an opinion or conclusion as to the cause of the collapse of the porch and not a statement of a fact based upon his personal observation.

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Bluebook (online)
266 S.W.2d 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levin-v-hilliard-mo-1954.