Merritt v. Kinloch Telephone Co.

115 S.W. 19, 215 Mo. 299, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 115 S.W. 19 (Merritt v. Kinloch Telephone Co.) 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
Merritt v. Kinloch Telephone Co., 115 S.W. 19, 215 Mo. 299, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 281 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Plaintiff sues for personal injuries alleged to have been occasioned by a hole or depression in that portion of the street or sidewalk in the city of St. Louis at or near the northwest corner of Newstead avenue and Lucky street. Newstead avenue runs north and south and Lucky street east and west. Plaintiff, as alleged, was -walking north on the west side of Newstead avenue. At or near this corner the defendant Kinloch Telephone Company had a telephone pole, which it desired to remove and replace with a new and different one. Before doing’ so, it obtained, upon proper application, a written permit from the city, in this language:

“Permit 1192.
Marked Exhibit B-2.
“September 18th, 1901.
“Permission is hereby granted to Kinloch Telephone Company to replace its pole on the northwest corner of Newstead avenue and Lucky street with a forty-five foot pole, per application of September 13th, 1901. Said work must be done under the supervision and control of the Supervisor of City Lighting and to his satisfaction.”

[304]*304The fall by -which plaintiff was injured was on February 5-, 1902. The charge is that under this permit the telephone company made an excavation for the purpose of removing the old pole and putting in the new one. That it so left the ground that when the dirt settled a hole was created,- which was permitted to remain, and in which plaintiff slipped and fell, receiving the injuries sued for in this action. Suit was first brought in the city of St. Louis, but by agreement a change of venue was taken to Audrain county, where the cause was finally tried, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $4,000, upon which judgment was entered. The trial was had upon a second amended petition in which the city was a party defendant. The original petition was against the Telephone Company alone. Answer of each defendant was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. Reply general denial. The appeal reaches this court owing to the fact that the city is a party, the amount of the judgment being less than the usual jurisdiction of this court.

Each defendant has filed a separate brief raising questions peculiarly applicable to itself. This necessitates a separate discussion in the course of the opinion, but there are some essential facts which are common to both, and these we will now state.

As stated above, the plaintiff, at about seven o’clock on the evening of February 5, 1902, was walking north on the west side of Newstead avenue. It appears that there was more or less sno-w and ice upon the walks. When he reached the south side of Lucky street he- came to a brick 'crossing which was eight feet in width. On this crossing was a foot-path (as we take it, in the snow and ice), which had been used by pedestrians. This path the plaintiff followed. There was a lamp-post, upon which was a lighted lamp1, at the southwest corner of Newstead avenue and Lucky street, but plaintiff claims that after getting half way [305]*305or more across the street, this lamp being at his back, his vision was not materially aided thereby. A line continued straight north from the west line of the brick crossing upon which plaintiff was travelling would include a telephone pole belonging to the Kinloch Company in the walk just north of the curb on the south side of the north sidewalk on Lucky street. Plaintiff claims that to the east side of this pole was a large deep depression occasioned by the sinking of the earth following the setting of a new pole instead of an old one which was taken out. It appears that from the fence line to the outside line of the curb was a space of ten feet. In the center of this was a granitoid sidewalk six feet in width, thus leaving two feet of dirt space to the north and two feet to the south, but out of the south two feet would be taken the” curb¡ rock space, which was six inches. The dirt space then to the south side of the walk would be eighteen inches. In this space was located the telephone pole in question. To the west of the telephone pole, partly in the granitoid and partly in the dirt space south thereof was a fire-plug box. The following plat, introduced in evidence, shows the situation:

[306]*306[[Image here]]

[307]*307Plaintiff says that as he was stepping np from the brick crossing to the curb and sidewalk his left leg slipped into the hole on the east side of the. telephone pole, causing him to fall and break his leg. That there was a hole in this walk, or the dirt portion thereof, to the east of the telephone pole, for some considerable length of time prior to the accident, is well established. There is also evidence tending to show that the police force made report thereof. This was as early as January 3, 1902, over a month prior to the accident. As to whether this report and knowledge went further than the police department is a mooted question, although the practice in St. Louis seems to have been that, reports of sidewalk conditions coming from the police department, in regular order, reached the proper department, whose duty it was to see that repairs were made. It also appears that the Kinloeh Company had persons whose duty it was to report the facts, if there should' be sinks around the poles, but it also appears that this particular sinking was not reported, nor were there any reports as to the numerous other poles of the company in the city. In other words the testimony from the side of the company gave each and every pole set by the company a clear bill of health in this regard.

For the Kinloeh Company, the evidence tends to show that in taking up the old pole and resetting the new the excavation was made wholly upon the west side of the old pole, whilst in opposition thereto the testimony upon the part of plaintiff was to the effect that the fire-plug box was within six inches of the west side of the pole to. be removed, and that it protruded three inches or more over the granitoid sidewalk into the dirt space between it and the curb, so that there would be but fifteen inches of space in which to dig a hole six feet deep, in which it appears that men, at the time of the digging, actually went down into and worked. This states sufficient of the facts to en[308]*308able á discussion of tbe points raised. Inasmuch. as each defendant has filed a separate brief and made separate contentions, we will take up- those of the Ehnloch Company first in the course of the opinion.

I. At the threshold of this case, in so far as the Kinloch Telephone Company is concerned, we are met with a question of the admissibility of evidence. Witnesses who had seen the depression in the earth to the east of the telephone pole testified that in their judgment the depression or hole was caused by the sinking or settling of the earth. It may be conceded that these witnesses were not experts. Nor do we think the question is one of expert testimony. These witnesses saw the conditions and saw the depression. It is a matter difficult of description. It would be hard for a witness to so describe the conditions as would place the jury in possession of the same impressions obtained by the witness. In such case the opinion of a non-expert witness is proper and may be admitted. In Elsner v. Sup. Lodge, 98 Mo. l. c. 645, we said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 S.W. 19, 215 Mo. 299, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-v-kinloch-telephone-co-mo-1908.