McKeighan v. Kline's Inc.

98 S.W.2d 555, 339 Mo. 523, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 685
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 555 (McKeighan v. Kline's Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKeighan v. Kline's Inc., 98 S.W.2d 555, 339 Mo. 523, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 685 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

*525 HAYS, J.

Action for damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff in falling on the floor of an entrance to one of the defendant’s stores in Kansas City, Missouri. From a judgment for plaintiff for $10,000 the defendant appealed.

Defendant occupied two store buildings situated in the interior of the block bounded on the west by Main, on the east by Walnut, on the south by Twelfth, and on the north by Eleventh Street. One building fronted on Walnut and the other on Main, opposite each other and separated by a paved public alley running north and south between Twelfth and Eleventh streets. For the use and convenience of persons desiring to pass from one building to the other, on the ground floor, defendant provided and maintained in the rear end of each building a set of standard swinging doors, with glass in the top panel, affording an opening from a vestibule into the alley. Another set of doors opened from the vestibule into the store proper. The vestibule floor of the east or Walnut Street building sloped downward from the alley level to the level of the floor of the store (degree of incline not shown) and was paved with standard non-slip tile which contained carborundum as an ingredient. Upon this floor in this building the plaintiff fell.

On March 31, 1931, in the noon hour, plaintiff proceeded from the Baltimore Hotel, where she was employed, to defendant’s Main Street store to make a purchase. Shortly she passed through that store, *526 crossed the alley to and entered the vestibule or the alley entrance of the Walnut Street store, and slipped and fell upon the floor.

The petition contained several specifications of negligence. The case was submitted on but one of them, the theory of which may be stated thus:

(1) The defendant, having maintained the vestibule floor in connection with said passway with knowledge of the conditions described hereinafter and of the likelihood of danger arising therefrom to customers passing from one of the buildings to the other by the means provided, is to be charged with constructive knowledge of the conditions existing and of the danger encountered by the plaintiff at the time and place in question, and defendant’s failure to remove it or warn of it was culpable negligence. (2) The defendant had prior knowledge of the conditions and danger which plaintiff encountered, in time by the exercise of ordinary care to have remedied or warned of the danger before the occurrence of the injury, and hence was guilty of negligence in failing to exercise such care.

On this theory alone the case was submitted to the jury, after the court’s refusal to give an instruction offered by the defendant in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence as a whole. Such refusal is the principal error assigned by defendant (appellant), and will be first considered. We take the facts from defendant’s brief and addenda furnished by plaintiff’s brief.

Plaintiff had evidence tending to show the alley was much used by delivery trucks in serving, and in parking at the rear of, various stores on either side, but not ordinarily parking within the white lines marking the passage used by persons in crossing from one of defendant’s stores' to the other. Oil and grease was dropped in the alley by motor cars in such use of it &nd tracked by their wheels. The two buildings were connected in the upper floors by a structure directly above the surface passway, protecting it from rain to some extent. In that condition of the surface rain would cause oily, greasy and dirty water to flow down the middle or lower portion of the alley and such substance was at times tracked into the vestibule in question from the surface of the alley — particularly in wet weather— by customers and persons using the passway. A great number of persons used it.

Plaintiff testified that as she crossed the alley she observed its condition ; the weather was damp, misty, rainy, and snowing some through the day; there were puddles standing in the alley, and a blotch of oil that she avoided; that as she reached the doors of the vestibule no one was ahead of her, except a man who preceded her at a distance the width of the alley; that she pushed and entered by the south or right-hand door; that she took the first step in with her left foot and that when she took the next, step, with her right foot, *527 sbe “had the sensation of something nnder my foot — I stepped in something. . . . Immediately — instantaneously—it slipped out from under me with an angle, with the sensation of sliding through something,” and that she went down on the floor in an angling position.

Plaintiff’s witness, Mrs. Rundus, testified that she had come from the Main Street store through the alley to the Walnut Street store and was directly behind the plaintiff when she was injured, and that the alley was dirty, oily and greasy; that plaintiff toot hold of the door and she thought took one step and fell; that where she fell, “there was sort of a line made where your heel slips, you know,” it was “not hardly a foot I wouldn’t say.”

Plaintiff said that as she opened the alley door and started into the vestibule she looked at the floor and that it had “an appearance of a dirty, muddy looking east on the tile, dirty and dark and black looking tracks.”' Mrs. Rundus testified that after plaintiff fell and was lying on the floor she noticed that the floor was wet. The driver of the ambulance by which plaintiff left the building testified on plaintiff’s behalf that when plaintiff was put in the ambulance he noticed some dirt or something “slimy like grease” on plaintiff’s dress at her hip, and plaintiff testified that there was grease on the arm and the bottom of her coat when she was taken to the hospital.

As to her knowledge and observation of conditions the plaintiff said: “Oh, yes,”' she had been in the Kline’s stores before and gone from one to the other across the alley. She knew that the floor was on an incline from the vestibule doors; that when she opened the door to enter the vestibule she was not surprised to see some moisture there and, looking at the floor, it all looked the same as far as the light would permit. She knew that it was usual for customers in considerable numbers to pass from one of the stores to the other by that route all the time. She said, that almost immediately after she fell the man referred to above came from the store proper to help her up; she later learned he was the manager of the first floor of the Walnut Street store.

According to defendant’s evidence the floor manager, being called to the scene and being the first person to reach plaintiff, saw to her removal to the rest room and called an ambulance. The vestibule was cleaned nightly; also there was a porter on duty on the first floor during the day, who made the rounds of that floor, including the vestibule, from time to time — every hour or so — and cleaned same as necessary. The vestibule floor material was standard and such as is generally used in store entrances that have any incline. On returning at once from the rest room he examined the floor where plaintiff had fallen. He saw no grease or oil or other substance on it. Nor did any witness testify to having seen any on that day. There *528

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.2d 555, 339 Mo. 523, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckeighan-v-klines-inc-mo-1936.