Lewis v. Gershon

335 S.W.2d 522, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 533
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 1960
Docket23063
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 335 S.W.2d 522 (Lewis v. Gershon) 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
Lewis v. Gershon, 335 S.W.2d 522, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 533 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

SPERRY, Commissioner.

Plaintiff, a tenant of defendant, sued for damages growing out of personal .injuries suffered in a fall on a stairway in the premises. From a verdict and judgment in the sum of $5,000 defendant appeals.

The facts necessary to a decision on the issues are simple and virtually undisputed. Defendant owned an apartment house located at 1309 East Armour Boulevard',. Kansas City, Missouri, and plaintiff had' been a tenant in an apartment located! therein for two years prior to this occurrence.

The house faced north and plaintiff occupied an apartment on the second floor east. In order to reach the street she had to descend a stairway to the front door on the first floor, which opened onto a concrete porch, thence down a flight of five concrete steps, to the west, to a concrete landing. From thence one must turn to the .right and descend a flight of concrete steps to the sidewalk. The porch and steps had been given two coats of gray enamel paint about four months before the accident and, as a result, were hard, smooth and slick.

On the occasion of the accident plaintiff was preparing to go out, at noon, on June 13, 1956. She had come from her apartment to the porch, to a point about a foot from its edge. The top of the porch forms the top stép of this flight of stair steps. *524 Mrs. Lansky, a tenant of another of the apartments, was standing on the west portion of the porch. Plaintiff was waiting for her granddaughter, who was to take her out. She and Mrs. Lansky engaged in some conversation and Mr. Williams, janitor and handyman of the building, who was nearby, also discoursed with plaintiff.

Plaintiff stated that she stepped down from the porch with her left foot and fell to the bottom of the flight, having missed the fop step, and all of the steps.

Defendant urges error because of the overruling of his motion for directed verdict, offered at the close of the case, and of his after-trial motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict, on the grounds that the evidence was insufficient to make a submissible case.

Before proceeding to discuss the facts with reference to the points presented it is proper to note that this is a landlord-tenant case, not one involving a busines’s invitee, or a licensee. Here, the stairway upon which plaintiff fell was one that was not demised to plaintiff but was reserved by defendant for the common use of himself and all tenants who occupied the various apartments in the building. Plaintiff could enter and leave her apartment, to and from the street, by no other manner than by traversing these steps. So long as she occupied the apartment she had no alternative except to use the steps. The distinction between the two types of cases is, well stated in O’Neill v. Sherrill, Mo. App., 254 S.W.2d 263, 267, to-wit:

“Said cases hold that an owner or possessor of land may not be held liable to his licensees, whether business visitors or gratuitous licensees, for bodily injuries sustained by them and caused by a dangerous condition of the premises, if said injured person knew of the condition and realized the risk involved. The right of such person to enter the land is derived solely from the possessor’s consent, which he is free to give or withhold at will. Therefore, the one entering the land under such invitation is entitled to nothing more than knowledge of the dangerous condition which he may encounter, so that he may exercise an intelligent choice as to whether the advantage to be gained from accepting the invitation is sufficient to justify the risk which he knows is inseparable from it. Knowledge on the part of the invitee dispenses with the duty to warn, and where the evidence shows such knowledge, no breach of duty is shown; hence there is no actionable negligence.
“This rule, however, does not apply where the relation of landlord and tenant obtains. Roman v. King, 289 Mo. 641, 233 S.W. 161, 25 A.L.R. 1263; Brewer v. Silverstein, Mo.Sup., 64 S.W.2d 289; and Coats v. Sandhofer, Mo.App., 248 S.W.2d 455. In such cases, the required standard of care to be exercised by the landlord toward a tenant, and those standing in his right, though defined as the exercise of ordinary care, affords greater protection in that actionable negligence may exist even though the injured party may be aware of the defect and its dangerous potentialities.”

In a business invitee case, plaintiff’s knowledge of the existence of a dangerous condition constitutes a defense to an action for injuries. But, in a landlord-tenant case, plaintiff’s knowledge of a defect in the premises is of force only in so far as it bears upon his,contributory negligence ; and a finding that he had no knowledge thereof is not an essential element of his cause of action. Copien v. Zimmerman, Mo., 271 S.W.2d 513, 517. He may have some knowledge of a defective condition in the premises and, nevertheless, use them, providing that he exercises due care in view of the hazard, unless it is of such a dangerous character that no reasonable person, in the exercise of due care, would use them. Copien v. Zimmerman, supra. In the case of an invitee, the proprietor- is required to exercise ordinary care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition for use of his invitee, or to warn him of a *525 danger of which he has knowledge and of which the invitee is unaware, or which is not reasonably obvious to him. A landlord is required to exercise ordinary care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition for his tenant, but he is not liable if the tenant is guilty of negligence contributing to his own injury.

The concrete porch and steps had been painted with a hard gray enamel over a red enamel and, as a result thereof, the surface was extremely hard, smooth, and “slicky”. Mrs. Lansky, who used the porch and steps in common with plaintiff and other tenants, was so afraid of falling on it that when she walked on it, she always hung onto the walls. She indicated that it had been that way for a long time. All of the steps were materially lower at the edges than they were further back. They sloped to the front. Plaintiff stated that the porch and steps were dangerously “slicky”, so much so that she only left the building every two days, for fear of falling; that she was always afraid of falling on account of the “slicky” condition, that the porch and steps had been' “slicky” “from the first time they painted' it was slicky”. From the evidence it is clear that the jury could have found that the porch and steps were not in a reason-' ably safe condition for the use of those who had occasion to use them in going to and from the premises; that their unsafe condition was known to and permitted by defendant to exist for a long period of time; and that he was negligent so as to render him liable for injuries occurring by reason of such condition.

Defendant contends that plaintiff, by her own testimony, has shown that she fell by reason of her own negligence in that she stepped down and missed the first step, causing her to fall to the bottom of the flight.

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Bluebook (online)
335 S.W.2d 522, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-gershon-moctapp-1960.