Morgan v. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co.

154 S.W.2d 44, 348 Mo. 542, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 433
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 22, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 154 S.W.2d 44 (Morgan v. Kroger Grocery & Baking 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
Morgan v. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co., 154 S.W.2d 44, 348 Mo. 542, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 433 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

*544 ELLISON, J. —

The plaintiff-respondent recovered a judgment against the defendant-appellant, Kroger Grocery & Baking ‘ Company, for $10,000 damages for personal injuries sustained in falling on an icy sidewalk when approaching the latter’s store in a building.at 4066 Shenandoah Avenue in St. Louis on February 3, 1936. Nine of the jury concurred in the verdict. The city and Wm. J. and Alice S. Meisburger, husband and wife and owners and lessors of the building, also were joined as defendants, but the plaintiff dismissed as to the city and the jury found for the defendant Meisburgers. The assignments on this appeal complain: that the trial court erred in refusing to give a peremptory instruction for appellant; of the giving and refusal of instructions; and of the remarks and argument of plaintiff’s counsel, and rulings thereon.

The case was first argued and submitted in Division I of this court , and an opinion written dismissing the appeal because appellant’s abstract and brief were held defective. On a dissent of one of the judges the cause was transferred to the court en banc. Appellant has filed a new abstract and brief here. Respondent asks [46] us to disregard them and adhere to the divisional opinion. But the law is otherwise. The case stands here as if it had not been previously heard and submitted. [Morris v. K. C. Lt. & Power Co., 302 Mo. 475, 481, 258 S. W. 431; Sutton v. Anderson, 326 Mo. 304, 318, 31 S. W. (2d) 1026, 1030.]

The building had ,a fifty-foot double front -with. two storerooms. One, on the corner of Shenandoah and Thurman Avenues, was occupied by a drug store, and the other by the Kroger Company. To the left of the latter storeroom (as you face it) was a door and stairway leading to the second floor, which was rented for living apartments. Still to the left of the Meisburger building was a narrow passageway between it and the next building, with three steps leading up from the public sidewalk to the passageway, which latter was on the adjoining *545 lot. But a restrictive covenant in a deed executed some forty-six years before in June, 1890, forbade the erection of any building on the Meisburger lot closer than ten feet to the street line, in consequence of which the Meisburger building was set back from the property line a little over ten feet.

For- twenty years, to the knowledge of Mr. Meisburger and a witness who had conducted the drug store for that length of time, the ten-foot space just mentioned had been occupied by a concrete sidewalk which physically constituted an integral part of the regular sidewalk that continued on past the adjoining' lot. Sometime during that twenty-year period the regular sidewalk had been extended out to the street curbing, across a three-foot parkway or dirt strip, so that the whole afforded continuous lateral and longitudinal passage „t° the public from the curb to both stores, to the apartment entrance, and on up to the corner. These physical details are shown by two photographs, Exhibits C and D, introduced by plaintiff and exhibited to the witnesses who testified on such matters. They are incorporated in this opinion. The point marked X on Exhibit C is where respondent testified she fell. According to her testimony it was two or three feet from the store entrance. • The point marked 0 is where witnesses for appellant said she fell. But we must rule the case on the evidence more favorable to respondent. Two other photographs also were introduced by respondent, but it is unnecessary to insert them. Exhibits C and D fairly show the situation. They are as follows.

EXHIBIT C.

*546 EXHIBIT D.

Respondent’s legal contention is that appellant was bound to maintain the space where she fell in condition for safe passage into the store because -. (1) it was a part of the leased premises, or appurtenant thereto; (2) it had never been-dedicated to street use and accepted by the city, so far as the record shows; (3) it was so close to the door of the store as to be a part of the entrance thereto; (4) appellant’s store manager saw her approaching from the time she got off the street car&emdash;as he, himself, testified&emdash;and yet failed to warn her of the danger, or to assist her. We need only say respondent is not entitled to rely on this last assignment of negligence because it *547 was not pleaded. The concluding paragraph of her third amended petition, on which the case was tried, expressly charges that all of her injuries were “directly due to the joint negligence of the defendants in permitting said slick and uneven ice and snow to be and remain upon said passage way and in failing to remove the same, ’1 when they knew or should have known of said unsafe condition in time to remedy it. There is no charge anywhere in the petition'of failure to warn or assist her.

Getting back to the other points, respondent’s supplemental brief en banc explicitly concedes that an abutting landowner has no duty to keep a city-owned sidewalk clear of ice unless he contributed to the hazard. So on respondent’s own theory the -case hinges on whether the place where she fell was not a public sidewalk, but a part of the leased premises, or appurtenant thereto. The lease was made in 1925 to the Missouri-Illinois Stores Company, cancelling a previous lease t.o the Piggly-Wiggly Stores, Inc.,-dated in November, 1922. It was assigned to appellant as lessee in September, 1928, nearly eight years before the casualty. It was a long ‘ ‘ Standard Store Lease,” nearly all printed. The printed part thereof does-recite the leasing of “the premises with all appurtenances thereto situated in the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri.” From there on, by the use of a small part of the printed matter, interlineations and typewriting, the lease reads: “known as No. 4066 Shenandoah Ave. to include the store room on the first floor, size 19x60 feet ceiling, 12 feet high,and wareroom 12x20 in rear thereof — -first floor, of the two story brick building, known and described as.” Then filled in in typewriting, it continues: “Part of Lot 14'in City Block 4923 fronting 25 feet on the South line of Shenandoah Avenue by a depth southwardly of 83 feet more or less to a line 40 feet north of alley more or less to edge of building facing Thurman Ave. and known as #4066 Shenandoah Ave. Bear entrance to said store room and warehouse from alley in the rear of said store building. ” ■

: It will be noted.-the description covers (-italics hereafter ours) “the premises with all appurtenances thereto - . . . to include the store room.” Further, it designates the property as “part of Lot 14. ’ It was that, being oner-half of the fifty-foot lot, lengthwise. • Also it says, “by a depth Southwardly of 83 feet more or less to a line 40 'feet north of alley more or less. ’ ’ This Would appear to be the front eighty-three feet .of the leased half of the lot, and-checks with the deed whereby the lot was conveyed to the Meisburgers, the description there, reciting the lot' was fifty feet wide and-123 feet four and 5/8 inches long from Shenandoah Avenue to the alley. - If-that is so, the lease- at least formally covered the ten-foot strip between the property line and the front of the building.

.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lammert v. Lesco Auto Sales
936 S.W.2d 846 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1996)
Lange v. Wehrenberg Theaters, Inc.
870 S.W.2d 880 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1993)
O'CONNELL v. Roper Electric Company, Inc.
498 S.W.2d 847 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1973)
State v. Norman
380 S.W.2d 406 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1964)
Martin v. Gilmore
358 S.W.2d 462 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1962)
Knight v. Calvert Fire Ins. Co.
268 S.W.2d 53 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1954)
United Farm Agency v. Howald
263 S.W.2d 889 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1954)
Williamson v. St. Louis Public Service Co.
252 S.W.2d 295 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1952)
Brandenburg v. Kasparian
247 S.W.2d 806 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1952)
Elder v. Dixie Greyhound Lines, Inc.
158 F.2d 200 (Eighth Circuit, 1946)
Knorp v. Thompson
175 S.W.2d 889 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1943)
Fears v. Newman Mercantile Company
156 S.W.2d 909 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1941)
State Ex Rel. Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Hostetter
156 S.W.2d 673 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.W.2d 44, 348 Mo. 542, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-kroger-grocery-baking-co-mo-1941.