McClure v. Koch

433 S.W.2d 589, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 600
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1968
Docket33018
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 433 S.W.2d 589 (McClure v. Koch) 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
McClure v. Koch, 433 S.W.2d 589, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 600 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

RUDDY, Judge.

Plaintiff, Genevieve McClure, brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by her when she fell on a ramp leading to a sidewalk in front of a store owned and operated by *591 defendant. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered pursuant to a jury verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff complains about an instruction given on behalf of the defendant ; about the exclusion of certain evidence and about a statement made by counsel for defendant in the course of his final argument to the jury. We need to discuss only one of the complaints of plaintiff because we find it necessary to sustain the contention of defendant that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case against him.

On the date of plaintiff’s fall and for twelve years prior thereto, defendant was in control and possession of premises known as 11781 Manchester Road in Des Peres, Missouri. On the premises was a building housing a grocery and meat market owned and operated by the defendant. Within the premises and virtually surrounding the store was a parking lot. The only entrance to the store was a double door on the south side of the building. In front of the south side of the store building is a sidewalk which appears from the photographs in evidence to be approximately five feet in width. On each end of this sidewalk there is a ramp that slopes down from the sidewalk to the parking lot. The only ramp we are concerned with in this case is the one on the west end of the sidewalk which leads to the parking lot. The evidence shows that after you get off the ramp the parking lot continues to slope slightly downward. The parking lot slope, according to plaintiff’s witness — a consulting engineer — is less than the ramp slope. Defendant has owned and operated this store for twelve years and estimates that approximately 300 people come in and out of his store each day and that approximately one-fourth of these people use the west ramp. The ramp in question was there when defendant took over the store and in the time that defendant owned and operated the store he did no work of any kind on this ramp. In order to reach the parking lot on the south side of the walk one must step down approximately four to six inches to the parking lot, except in the approximate center of said walk, in front of the entrance door, where there is a ramp from the sidewalk to the parking lot. The west ramp is made of a “hot mix” or, as described by the consulting engineer, an as-phaltic concrete paving which he said under certain conditions may be considered a non-slip material and in certain other conditions it may not be non-slip. The witness did not explain under what conditions the asphaltic concrete paving may not be a non-slip material. In the time the store has been owned and operated by the defendant there has been no change in the structure or surface of this asphalt ramp. The consulting engineer said the ramp was four feet in width and about two feet in length. He said the slope dropped one inch for each three inches of horizontal slope. This witness testified that there was a custom and practice, “in the industry,” in the construction of this type of ramp, that the slope should not exceed one inch drop for each ten inches of horizontal run. This witness further testified that it was the custom in the community to provide inserts of carborundum crystals in the ramp, which would provide “ * * * a higher coefficience of friction, so that when your foot strikes against them, they don’t slide across.”

Plaintiff had been shopping at defendant’s store ever since she moved into the neighborhood of the store. She has lived in the neighborhood and has shopped at the store for two or three years and she had begun to shop at the store more frequently in the several months prior to her fall. She thought she shopped in the store in that period more than once a week. When attending the store she would park her automobile in the parking lot and would usually use the west ramp to and from the store. While there are other ramps, the west ramp was the one she used the most. She has gone up and down that ramp many times in the period she has been a customer of the store. All of this time the ramp in question has been in the same condition. She testified that she had no trouble before the date of her fall in ascending or descending the ramp and that *592 she experienced no slipping or anything like that on this ramp prior to the date of her fall. She found her travels to and from the store easier when she used this ramp. On the date of her fall she was wearing the same shoes she wore on prior occasions.

On May 13, 1964 plaintiff drove her automobile to the parking lot on the premises of the defendant between 4:00 and 5:00 P.M. The sky was overcast, but it was not raining. Plaintiff parked her automobile at a slight angle approximately one yard north of the ramp on which she fell. After she parked her car she walked up the west ramp and had no trouble at that time. She entered the store and was there a short time, during which she made a few purchases that she placed in a small package or bag. She then left the store with her package and a purse which she thought she carried over her arm. Upon leaving the store she turned to her right on the sidewalk and proceeded to the area of the west ramp. Plaintiff was asked whether or not she ever looked at the ramp as she approached it that day going toward her car; she answered, “Not the ramp, no. I was looking — Q. Toward your car? A. I wouldn’t look down, no.” Again when asked if she looked down at the ramp before she fell and as she was approaching it, she answered, “I had to, I guess, but I wasn’t aware of it. Q. Were you aware of whether there was any kind of foreign material, moisture or water, anything like that on the ramp? A. I didn’t look.” Again when asked if she had any knowledge of whether or not there was any kind of foreign material or anything at all wrong with the ramp, she answered, “No. I don’t know really.” She said she saw nothing unusual regarding the ramp. She did not look at the ramp after she fell to see if there was anything foreign on the ramp. Parts of plaintiff’s deposition were read in evidence by defendant. In these parts she testified as follows: “ * * * ‘All right, now, as you approached this ramp that you have described, did you see any foreign materials or any moisture or anything unusual on the ramp ? A. I wasn’t looking. I couldn’t tell you. Q. Did you at any time see anything unusual on that ramp? A. I was just approaching my car.’ ”

Plaintiff said she stepped on the ramp with her right foot. In explaining what happened thereafter, she said, “To my best recollection, it slipped and turned, and I fell on it. Q. Do you know how your ankle turned ? Can you tell us ? A. No, Mr. Hilleary, I do not.” After she fell a portion of her body was on the ramp. In her cross examination she said that she believed she first stepped on the ramp with her right foot “ * * * because that is what I fell on. Q. Was the other one on there? A. I don’t know. The ramp is not very large. I’m sure it must have been though — no, I’m not sure either. The ramp is not very big, and then when I fell, I can’t tell you really where my other foot was.” She finally said “Let’s put it down that both feet were on the ramp.” In another part of her testimony, when she was asked if she had any knowledge of whether or not there was any kind of foreign material or anything at all wrong with the ramp, she answered, “No, I don’t know really.” When reminded that she had said earlier that she had slipped, she answered, “I slipped, I assume.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
433 S.W.2d 589, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-koch-moctapp-1968.