May v. Hexter

226 S.W.2d 383, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 355
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1950
Docket27633
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 226 S.W.2d 383 (May v. Hexter) 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
May v. Hexter, 226 S.W.2d 383, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 355 (Mo. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

226 S.W.2d 383 (1950)

MAY
v.
HEXTER et al.

No. 27633.

St. Louis Court of Appeals, Missouri.

January 17, 1950.
Rehearing Denied February 17, 1950.

*384 Orville Richardson, St. Louis, for appellants.

Mollie C. Rickey, St. Louis, Edward H. Tenney, Jr., St. Louis, for respondent.

WOLFE, Commissioner.

This suit was brought against Maud M. Hexter, who operated a restaurant known as the Fairfax Tea Room, and Sidney and Jane Studt, who owned the building in which the restaurant was located. The plaintiff sued for damages arising out of personal injuries that she sustained when she fell down a stairway in the building. She charged joint negligence of all of the defendants and the trial resulted in a verdict for five thousand dollars against Sidney and Jane Studt but in favor of defendant Hexter. The Studts prosecute this appeal from the judgment against them.

The Fairfax Tea Room was in a two-story building on Forsythe Boulevard in Clayton, Missouri. This building, known as the Fairfax House, was built in 1938 and Studts acquired title to it in 1943. There were offices on the second floor which were reached by a common stairway and this floor also had a hallway and lavatory for the use of the tenants. On the ground floor there was the tea room, which occupied two-thirds of the space on the east side of the building, and a drug store on the west side. The tea room also leased and used a like amount of space in the basement. To the rear or north portion of the building was a hallway 53 inches wide with two doors opening into it. The door on one end was from the tea room and the door on the other end was from the drug store. The hall was too short to permit the doors which opened into it to be opened without overlapping to some extent when they were both fully opened at the same time. On the south side of the hallway was a flight of stairs 4 feet wide leading down to the portion of the basement used by the Fairfax Tea Room, the Jantzen Pharmacy and a part where toilets were located.

The plaintiff and a friend named Bernard went to the Fairfax Tea Room for luncheon one afternoon. Mrs. Bernard had patronized the restaurant before but Mrs. May had never been there. There was a front entrance to the place but it appeared to be blocked so Mrs. May and Mrs. Bernard went through the drug *385 store and the door leading to the rear hall. This way was frequently used to enter and leave the tea room and above it in the pharmacy was a sign that said "Fairfax House Restaurant".

The plaintiff followed Mrs. Bernard through the door and as they entered the hall two people were coming in the opposite direction from the tea room. Mrs. May stepped to the south with her back to the stairway to allow these people to pass. She did not see the stairs and did not know they were there and in stepping back she fell down them.

There was a recessed light in the hall ceiling and at the foot of the stairs but plaintiff stated that it was dim inside of the hall and that there was the bright light of the restaurant ahead of her. There was evidence that the light in the ceiling was a 60-watt bulb behind a quarter inch lens and that the stairs were similarly lighted but the bulb lighting them was not visible from the hall.

Other evidence such as that concerning the control of the hallway and the extent of plaintiff's injuries will be discussed as the points in relation to such evidence are considered.

The case was tried and submitted on the theory that the hallway was a perilous trap in that it was so narrow that patrons were forced to walk close to the top of the unguarded stairs descending directly from it, and that it was too poorly lighted to make the danger visible to members of the public using the hallway.

On voir dire examination the plaintiff properly established beyond the hearing of the jury that the Travelers Insurance Company was the insurer of Sidney Studt and Jane Studt and that the company was defending the case. One general question was asked the panel to determine whether any of the members were interested in the insurance company. In response to the question a juror replied: "I feel I ought to state that my husband is a broker and places business with that company; it does not prejudice me in any way." Whereupon counsel for the plaintiff stated: "If the Court please, may I ask that Mrs. Effrein be dismissed." The challenge of the juror was overruled and counsel for the appellants then moved for a mistrial on the grounds that the challenge made was equivalent to telling the jurors that there was insurance in the case. The court denied the motion for a mistrial and it is contended that it erred in so doing.

The very purpose of allowing jurors to be questioned regarding their possible connection with a defending insurance company is to determine the fitness of a juror to serve if such a connection is revealed. Plaintiff's counsel has a right to challenge for cause where such connection is revealed even though the juror stated that she was not prejudiced. Jurors are not the judge of their own qualifications. A situation similar to the one presented was fully discussed by the Missouri Supreme Court in Murphy v. Cole, 338 Mo. 13, 88 S.W.2d 1023, where it was held that an agent for a defending insurance company was incompetent to sit as a juror. It might be further stated that this court has held that the interrogation of jurors relative to their connection with a defending insurer be left to the sound discretion of the trial court with which we will not interfere unless there has been a manifest abuse of discretion. Gerran v. Minor, Mo. App., 192 S.W.2d 57, loc. cit. 61. The ruling of the court in denying the motion for a mistrial was proper.

Appellants claim that the court should have directed a verdict in their favor. They assert that there was no evidence that the landlord maintained control over the hallway in question. The evidence of the landlord's control is of such an abundance that it is difficult to see how such a contention can seriously be raised. There was in evidence the lease by which Mrs. Hexter held occupancy of that part of the building used as a restaurant and this instrument contained the following description of the space leased:

"First Floor and Basement Space, of approximately 3600 square feet, which has been occupied by the Lessor in the operation of the FairFax House Tea Room, which space is exclusive of public Hallways, doorways and the space occupied at *386 present by the Jantzen Pharmacy, all located in the building known as FairFax House and numbered 8027-29 Forsythe Boulevard, Clayton, Missouri." (Emphasis ours.)

In addition to this reservation in the lease of control over the public hallway there was evidence that the Studts furnished and paid for the light used in the hallway and on the stairs, and for the water in the toilet rooms in the basement. These defendants had employed at one time a janitor who cleaned the stairway and Mrs. Hexter testified that the hallway in question was the public hallway mentioned in the lease. The defendants offered evidence to show that the original lease to Mrs. Hexter was entered into by a prior owner before the erection of the building and that according to a blueprint called "Scheme A" a stairway was to have been located within the restaurant and there was to be no hallway. The building was not so built and the "Scheme A" has no bearing upon the subsequent lease by a subsequent owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W.2d 383, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-hexter-moctapp-1950.