Malon v. Service & Management Co.

416 S.W.2d 44, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 693
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1967
DocketNo. 32050
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 416 S.W.2d 44 (Malon v. Service & Management Co.) 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
Malon v. Service & Management Co., 416 S.W.2d 44, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 693 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

Jury trial in this cause resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $3,500.00. Thereafter the trial court sustained the defendant’s motion for judgment in accordance with its motion for a directed verdict and set aside the judgment entered in favor of plaintiff who appeals.

However inartfully expressed in the petition, it is clear that plaintiff’s theory was that defendant who owned the house in which plaintiff lived voluntarily attempted to repair a leaky roof but did not use ordinary care in doing so with the result the roof continued to leak and plaintiff walking in the kitchen at night was caused to fall and suffer injuries due to the accumulation of water on the kitchen floor. The jury found in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant and assessed plaintiff’s damages at $3,500.00. The trial court set aside the judgment entered on this verdict on the specified ground that “there was no evidence tending to establish any negligence of the defendant which proximately caused plaintiff’s injuries.” The case was tried prior to MAI becoming effective. That portion of plaintiff’s verdict directing instruction which is pertinent to this issue required the jury to find plaintiff was caused to fall as a direct result of the negligence of the defendant in failing to use ordinary care in repairing the roof. We take this action of the trial court as the equivalent of ruling the plaintiff failed to make a submissible case.

[46]*46Plaintiff fell upon two different occasions. The first of these falls was on February 21, 1962, and the issues as to her injuries resulting from that fall were stated in Count I of plaintiff’s petition. The jury found in favor of the defendant as to that count of plaintiff’s cause of action and since no appeal was taken from that decision the fall of February 21, 1962, passes out of the case. Count II of the petition referred to plaintiff’s injuries arising from a fall on or about April 5, 1962, and it was as to the injuries resulting from this fall that the jury found in favor of the plaintiff. We will therefore confine our recitation of the evidence, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, to that having reference to the fall in April.

The evidence in this case is not really in dispute except as to one fact. Plaintiff contends defendant had men working upon the repair of this roof upon two occasions while defendant insists the men inspected on the first occasion and actually worked upon the roof only on March 8, 1962. The parties stipulated as to work being done on that date and, taking the evidence in the light required of us, we hold the evidence established that work was also done upon an earlier occasion in February.

Plaintiff and her family moved into this house in September of 1961. It was in January of 1962 the ceiling in the kitchen started dripping water. Plaintiff’s husband made a complaint and sometime during the first week in February a man came out to repair the roof. He asked where it was leaking and was given the answer that it was leaking only in the kitchen. The man got onto the roof and the plaintiff’s husband testified he heard the man walking around on that portion of the roof above the kitchen. He stayed about forty-five minutes. On that occasion the repairman had a broom and two 5-gallon cans of tar with him but there was no evidence as to whether the tar in the buckets was then put on the roof. The roof continued to leak when it rained and between February and March of 1962 the ceiling in the kitchen was damp from water dripping, the wallpaper was cracked, and there was a big piece of it hanging down.

They again complained and on March 8, 1962, some men returned to the house to repair the roof. They carried two buckets of tar up the ladder and onto the roof. After that there was no more leakage until just prior to plaintiff’s fall in April. There was no evidence as to precipitation during the period from this repair until the day of plaintiff’s fall on April 5th.

When they first moved in there were no cracks in the ceiling. Plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 and 2 show perpendicular cracks in the ceiling from which the ceiling paper has peeled away. One is about 9-10 feet long and the other 4 — 5 feet long. These cracks in the ceiling increased in size between the date of the first repair and the time of the plaintiff’s fall. Every time it rained the leak got progressively worse. The plaintiff and her family placed pots and pans around on the floor and attempted to catch this water in that manner but water still got all over the floor. It often had to be mopped up after a rain.

There is nothing in defendant’s evidence of assistance to plaintiff’s case. However, to fully understand what is involved here and the manner in which the repair was done we will set out certain portions of defendant’s evidence. The defendant offered testimony by the witness Squire who qualified as an expert in roof repair as to how the work was done on this roof. His testimony was that the cracks in the ceiling were not evident when you looked at the roof from the top of it and that he made an inspection of the whole roof and saw no defects. His testimony and that of his assistant, Tybura, was that they located the area over the cracks in the ceiling by measuring their distance from the walls and then, when on the roof, they measured the distance from the walls thereby fixing that area of the roof above the ceiling cracks. They raked back the gravel, swept all the loose dust away, marked off an area ex[47]*47tending four feet to each side of the crack, poured the asphalt emulsion on the roof, spread it out over a sixty-four square foot area, and then raked the gravel back over this area so that it would hold the tar in place. Squire testified this was the proper way to repair a flat roof of this type using the cold tar method. It is undisputed there was never any repair done inside the house.

The fall upon which Count II of plaintiff’s petition is based and with which this appeal is concerned occurred about 1:30 A.M. on April S, 1962. Plaintiff’s evidence was that it rained off and on that evening and was still drizzling intermittently at that time while plaintiff was watching television. She got up and went into the kitchen intending to go to the stove to turn on a light. While doing so her evidence is that she fell on the floor which had become slippery from the water which was dripping down from the crack in the ceiling of this room. Plaintiff’s son was in his room in the basement at the time and he heard his mother fall. She called for him and when he came back upstairs he found his mother lying on the floor by the stove and he noticed there was water on the floor at that place in a puddle which he estimated as being “two feet across.” It further appeared that the kitchen floor sloped somewhat toward the point at which the stove was placed and water would collect there.

The only other testimony pertinent to this appeal was given during plaintiff’s cross-examination when she was asked whether the roof would still leak had the repairmen done a good job on it. She replied “ * * * they could overlook something, not covered with enough tar or not did a proper job at the time.”

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Bluebook (online)
416 S.W.2d 44, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malon-v-service-management-co-moctapp-1967.