Logsdon v. Central Development Ass'n

123 S.W.2d 631, 233 Mo. App. 499, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 48
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 631 (Logsdon v. Central Development Ass'n) 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
Logsdon v. Central Development Ass'n, 123 S.W.2d 631, 233 Mo. App. 499, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 48 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

*502 BLAND, J.

— This is an action in tort for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $500, and defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff, a tenant, from month to month, in defendant’s office building located in the City of Independence, on November I, 1934, while attempting to turn off the water on a lavatory in his office, cut his hand by the breaking of the porcelain handle of the faucet.

The evidence shows that plaintiff is an attorney-at-law and his *503 offices were occupied by himself, his brother and his stenographer. There were 31 rooms in the office building in question. About a year and a half prior to the injury plaintiff rented Room No. 2 in the building and in the early part of February, 1934, he rented Room No. 3. Thereafter he conducted the business of his profession in the two rooms. The lavatory was situated in Room No. 3. There was no written agreement relative to the renting of these two rooms. The oral agreement was that defendant would furnish the heat, light, water and janitor service, keep the rooms clean and make the necessary repairs. At the time plaintiff rented Room No. 3 he agreed with defendant’s manager that defendant would renovate the rooms, put them in condition and take care of any work in the way of repairs that was necessary around the office; that if any repairs were needed, or in the event anything went wrong with either of the rooms, plaintiff would take the matter up with the manager or the janitor.

The evidence further shows that defendant’s manager kept keys to all of the offices in the building, including plaintiff’s; that he had charge and control of the hallways, stairways, and entrance to the building, the cleaning and repairing of the rooms, the furnishing of heat, hot water and lights and the repairing of broken windows, radiators and light fixtures and other repairs that were needed. The janitor had a pass key to the offices and he would clean the latter after office hours.

The evidence further shows that the lavatory in question was used very little by plaintiff and the other individuals who occupied plaintiff’s office suite, as no towels were furnished by the defendant or the occupants, whereas, defendant furnished, in the building, a general lavatory and washroom with towels. The janitor was supposed to keep the lavatory in question clean but discharged this duty indifferently. There were two faucets on the lavatory, one for cold and the other for hot water. Plaintiff testified that prior to the September before he was injured he did not use the lavatory more than once. His brother testified: “I would say it was merely an ornament and used but once a month. It was never used unless the stenographer used it, which was seldom. Q. You didn’t see it used more than once a month by anybody? A. No.”

Plaintiff further testified that about a month or six weeks before his injury one of the faucets was leaking and he told his brother to notify the manager “to take care of it;”' that shortly after that the janitor came and did some work on the lavatory, the witness not knowing exactly what it was; that, thereafter, he did not observe the faucet leaking until the morning he was injured when he attempted to turn it off because it was leaking then.

The faucet was turned off and on by means of a porcelain handle, about the size of one’s “finger,” which-moved horizontally. One *504 handle contained the word "hot” and the other "cold.” It was the hot water fancet that plaintiff attempted to turn off with his left hand at the time he was injured. The handle was about three inches long and was composed of porcelain fitted over a brass shank or stem about a quarter of an inch in diameter. The faucet handle was smaller at the end where it fitted on to the faucet shaft and came out and ended in a "bulbous” tip. There was no screw iii the larger end of the handle. Plaintiff testified that he did not use any "unusual force,”' or any more than he would ordinarily use, in turning the handle on a faucet, but that it "just crushed in the palm of my hand,” the left hand; that the porcelain broke into several pieces, but mainly in two large ones; that the break was lengthwise of the handle and extended down diagonally.

After the injury plaintiff noticed the broken pieces of the faucet handle. He noticed that the break started at approximately where the bulb was the thickest and extended approximately to somewhere near the center of the handle. "The. break would come from this largest part of this bulbous point here and would run across, not exactly laterally, but in sort of a diagonal position down from this part here and the other part came up (indicating);” that the line of fracture was "perhaps a little below the middle of the side” and ran toward the smaller end in a "downward direction.” The porcelain part of the handle was white in color. Plaintiff noticed that there was a discoloration "on the side of this white inside there was discoloration which was quite heavy on the outside, that is, right next to the porcelain covering on the outside, and as it went in toward the inside, of course, it became dimmer until you get clear in close to the shank where it disappeared entirely;” that the soiled portion was perhaps an inch and a quarter or an inch and a half in length, that is, about one-half the entire length of the handle; that the thickest part of it began ‘ ‘ just a little back of where the bulbous part of it was, . . . and extended back toward the handle, that is, toward the stop where it was fastened on the faucet proper;” that the discolored portion of it was 1J or inches in length; that "it was large enough that it was readily observable by just glancing at it;” that the heavy portion of it (the discoloration) would go back approximately one-third of the entire width from the outside of the porcelain back to the part where it fits into the shank, and would gradually taper off until it got clear into the inside. Of course, as I say, the last small portion of it was a complete clean new break, no discoloration on it at all; ” that he would estimate the portion that was not discolored to be an eighth of an inch or a little deeper; that the discoloration was heaviest at the outside; that the color of the discoloration was black. Another witness testified that the discoloration was of the type "that we see on many kinds of *505 metal or stone or anything like that that is subject to air, dirt will get into anything that is broken.”'

Plaintiff’s brother testified that he examined the broken pieces of the porcelain handle after the injury; that the place where he noticed the dark place was “around the faucet the break of course being diagonal had to extend around the faucet, it would be possibly a half an inch that is around and- — Q. About half-way around is that it? A. Yes, about half-way around it;” that in September, 1934, he called in the janitor to fix the leaking faucet in question; that the janitor “took the faucet apart and had some packing and washers and” apparently stopped the leaking; that about a week or ten days before the injury he noticed that the faucet was again leaking ; that he notified the janitor again that the faucet was leaking but the janitor did not remedy it.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 631, 233 Mo. App. 499, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logsdon-v-central-development-assn-moctapp-1938.