Moses v. Independence, Mo. K.C. Pub. Serv. Co.

188 S.W.2d 538, 239 Mo. App. 361, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 385
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 538 (Moses v. Independence, Mo. K.C. Pub. Serv. Co.) 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
Moses v. Independence, Mo. K.C. Pub. Serv. Co., 188 S.W.2d 538, 239 Mo. App. 361, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 385 (Mo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

*366 CAVE, J.

This is ail action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a judgment against both defendants for $3350. Defendants took separate appeals; but by consent of all parties the appeals were consolidated and will be treated as one case.

According to plaintiff’s petition, she was injured October 1, 1941, while alighting from a bus of defendant Kansas' City Public Service Company at its stopping place on the south side of Lexington Avenue just west of Osage Avenue in the City of Independence. She charges that Lexington Avenue was paved with asphalt and that for a long time prior to the date of her injury “there was a defect in said street consisting of a rough, wavy, lumpy and uneven raised place and hole or depression on said Lexington Street of the following dimensions and description: Eight feet long in an east and west direction and between one and one-half and two feet in a north and south direction and raised up between four and six inches with a depression surrounding said area. That at the north edge of said area and about- midway of it was a deeper depression four to six inches deep and about ten to twelve inches square. That said condition above described was located in said Lexington Street approximately thirty-two feet west of the west curb of said Osage Avenue and approximately at the south curbing of said Lexington Street. That it was located directly in front of a driveway to a ‘Conoco’ gasoline filling station located on the south side of said Lexington Street and at Osage Avenue.” She charges the defendant City of Independence with notice of said defect and failure to repair, failure to barricade the defect or failure'to warn of said defect.

As to defendant Kansas .City Public Service Company she charges it “had provided a tegular bus stop for its eastbound busses on said Lexington Street on the south side of said Lexington Street near Osage Avenue and that by stopping at said regular bus stop persons alighting from said bus would not be required to walk over the defect in said street above described, as the place where persons would regularly light when busses would stop at their regular bus stop would be some distance removed from the defect in said street. That oh October 1, 1941, at seven A. M. plaintiff, who had previously boarded one of said busses and paid her fare and became a passenger on it, was in the act of alighting from said bus at the above location and by reason of the operator of said bus negligently failing to stop at the regular bus stop but instead stopping with the door of ,the bus through which persons alighted directly over the defect in said street and on said date, while plaintiff was alighting from said bus, she stepped directly from said bus onto the said defect at the point of said deep depression or a hole in the street, causing her foot to turn.

*367 . . That the defendant’s bus driver negligently stopped his said bus with the door, through which persons, including the plaintiff, had to alight, in close proximity and directly against and over said defect and negligently failed to furnish the plaintiff with a safe place upon which to alight and negligently failed to stop his bus at the regular stopping place.”

Defendants’ separate answers consisted of general denials and pleas of contributory negligence.

For brevity, we shall refer to the defendants (appellants) -as the city and bus company.

Both defendants contend that their demurrers to the evidence should have been sustained because plaintiff failed to make a submissible case. There are other assignments ■ of error, which are considered infra.

The scene of the accident was near the intersection of Osage Avenué and Lexington Avenue in the City of Independence. Osage is a north and south street and Lexington is an east and west street. There is a filling station located on the southwest corner of the intersection with a driveway into said station from Lexington Avenue, which avenue is paved with a concrete base and an asphalt surface. The driveway is twenty-five or thirty feet wide without any curbing at that point, but the approach from the gutter of the street up to the grade of the sidewalk and driveway is a rise of several inches. ' The bus company had a regular stop to receive and discharge passengers on Lexington Avenue near the filling station. This'accident occurred about 7 A. M., October 1, 1941. Plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s busses, which was being driven east on Lexington. The bus had two exits for passengers; one at the front and the other about the middle of the righthand side of the bus, which is referred to in the evidence as the “rear door.” Plaintiff left the bus through the middle or rear door, which was in front of the driveway into the filling station. In the street, and about six or eight inches from the curb line, there was a rough, uneven and depressed surface which was about eight feet long and one and one-half or two feet wide and parallel with the curb line.

Mr. Zimmerman, who had .operated the filling station for about twelve years prior to the time of the accident, described the surface of the street at the point in controversy in this way: “Well, there was quite a depression there in the street and quite a roll-up place where the asphalt had been pressed out and rolled up to the edge. It made quite a depression and bump there. It was right where the buses would always stop the back wheels. . . . Crossing over it quite often coming in from the north, cars would go- over that place'. It was quite a jolt for them. ... It would get worse in hot weather. . . .' Q. How deep would you say it was at/ the deepest part of that hole ? . . . I don’t know. I would just have to esti *368 mate it. I believe the. depth of the hole could be estimated all the way from one to three inches deep, that is the hole itself. Q. The place where it was piled up how high 'would that be ? A. From the top of the ridge to the bottom of the ■hole it could run all the way from three to five or six inches I believe. . . . Q. How long would you say that condition existed there before October 1st, 1941? A. Well, I would say, of-course it probably wasn’t that bad, but I would say about between six months and a year it had been getting in that condition. . . . Q. . . . This general depression, was it in this place where there had been a previous patch? A. Yes, sir, it was an area there that had been previously patched.”

Mr. Mack described the depression as being “pretty rough; . . . there was a variation o’f about six inches there. ... It was abrupt at one place. Q. That was the deepest place? A. Yes.” Mr. Kirk-ham described the situation in this manner: •“. . . There was a hole there and it had a ridge on the side of it, on the. south side, it was on the south side of the street and it was a hole approximately 3 inches deep, the hole was, but the ridge was approximately, oh, approximately 6 inches high. Q. That ■ deep from the bottom of the hole to the top of the ridge? A. No. Together the hole and the ridge was about'8 or 9 inches high. Q. What did that look like then in the street? A. It just looked like a hole

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 538, 239 Mo. App. 361, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moses-v-independence-mo-kc-pub-serv-co-moctapp-1945.