Rittershouse v. City of Springfield

319 S.W.2d 518, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 916
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 12, 1959
Docket46552
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 319 S.W.2d 518 (Rittershouse v. City of Springfield) 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
Rittershouse v. City of Springfield, 319 S.W.2d 518, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 916 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

VAN OSDOL, Commissioner.

This is an action in two counts by plaintiffs Bertie E. Rittershouse and her husband Paul L. Rittershouse for the aggregate of $22,500 damages for the wife’s personal injuries and the husband’s loss of the wife’s services which injuries allegedly were sustained when plaintiff wife stepped from the curb and fell on the crosswalk at the southeast corner of the intersection of St. Louis Street and South Avenue on the Public Square in Springfield. Plaintiffs’ claim was stated on the theory of defendant City’s negligence in permitting the public street to become and remain in a dangerous and unsafe condition. The jury returned a verdict for defendant. But the trial court sustained plaintiffs’ motion for new trial on the specified grounds of errors in giving defendant’s Instructions Nos. 6 and 6½. Defendant has appealed from the new-trial order.

Before examining defendant’s contention that the trial court erred in granting a new trial, we think it helpful to state some of the evidence introduced in the trial of the cause.

South Avenue, a north-south street, intersects east-west St. Louis Street on the public square at Springfield. -Square parking areas or “islands,” including sidewalks eight feet wide flanking both sides of the two streets, are at all four quadrants of the intersection and extend along the streets for distances of approximately seventy-seven feet from the intersection.

On the day she was injured, plaintiff wife (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff) had driven to the public square. She parked her automobile east of but near the intersection and walked westwardly on the sidewalk along the south side of St. Louis Street north of the southeast parking “island.” As she approached the curb at the southeast corner of the intersection, plaintiff saw that the traffic control device displayed a green light for traffic west-wardly across South Avenue. Northbound automobiles were “lined up” on her left awaiting the change of the traffic light for movement of traffic northwardly across St. Louis Street. Plaintiff started to step off the curb and when she was “halfway stepping down as it (the traffic light) changed, as I had started to step when it was green, and glanced back up and it changed to-caution.” She “pulled my step back”— “Well, I had started across the Square, and I came to the stop lights; the signal was green, and I looked up at it, as you will when you go to cross a street, naturally, and sort of glanced to where I was going to step, and then back up at the stop signal, and the cars were lined up ready to go across the Square. And as I glanced up, the signal turned caution, and rather than step out in the line of traffic, I pulled my step back some so I wouldn’t step so far out, and stepped on this raised place in the asphalt. It was quite rough, and extended out far enough for me to step on it in a way as to throw me out into the street, and I fell forward, and out into the street, * *

The “raised place in the asphalt” to which plaintiff referred was of irregular height from one and three-fourths inches to two and a half inches and extending and curved across the east-west crosswalk at a distance “all the way from two and a half to three and a half inches” from the curved curb at the southeast corner of the intersection. The raised place consisted of asphalt pushed up at the “expansion joint” between the pavement and curb.

Plaintiff sustained a chipped fracture of the navicular bone which likely was caused “by bending the foot too far down,” that *520 is, the injury which plaintiff sustained was likely caused “by the toe being pulled down” —the foot would “have to go down, and in.”

Defendant’s Instruction No. 6 was as follows,

“Court instructs the jury that the mere fact that the plaintiff, Mrs. Bertie E. Rit-tershouse, was injured by a fall upon defendant’s street is no evidence of itself that defendant was negligent in keeping its streets in a reasonably safe condition, but on the contrary, the plaintiffs must, by the evidence, show that the defendant was guilty of negligence as defined in these instructions and the burden of proof is upon the plaintiffs to establish such negligence by the greater weight or preponderance of the evidence.” (We shall consider the instruction as if it more correctly used “failing to keep” instead of “in keeping.”)

We think the instruction was prej-udicially erroneous because we believe the instruction entirely excluded from the jury’s consideration, in determining the issue of City’s negligence, the fact that plaintiff was “injured by a fall” upon City’s street.

Recently this court in Citizens Bank of Festus v. Missouri Natural Gas Co., Mo.Sup., 314 S.W.2d 709, 714, had occasion to discuss “mere fact” instructions of varying language. In the Citizens Bank case, the negligence charged was in the installation and servicing of a gas-heating unit in a furnace. The jury was instructed “ ‘that the mere fact of itself that there was a fire in the premises * * * is no evidence whatever that defendant was in fact negligent.’ ” .The instruction was held to be clearly erroneous. The fact that there was a fire on plaintiff’s premises and particularly a fire in the room where the furnace was located was an important circumstance to be considered in that circumstantial evidence case. But even in the instant case — not a true circumstantial evidence case — we believe it may not be correctly said — in fact, we believe it to be absolutely untrue to say that the mere fact that plaintiff was “injured by a fall” upon City’s street was no evidence of itself that defendant was negligent.

In- this case we have noted the evidence that plaintiff stepped from the curb and upon the uneven ridge of asphalt and fell and sustained an injury which was said to be of such a nature as to have been occasioned by the foot being “pulled down * * * and in” — a likely result of a pedestrian stepping from the curb onto the uneven asphaltic ridge in the circumstances as detailed by plaintiffs’ evidence. One of the factual issues was whether the uneven ridge rendered the street dangerous and not reasonably safe. This was a step in making the essential proof in invoking the consequent duty of City (having [timely] knowledge actual or constructive 'of the dangerous condition, in the exercise of ordinary care) to remedy the condition —and the failure to perform the duty would be negligence'. Now, isolating and considering alone the shown mere fact of itself that plaintiff was injured by a fall upon the street from the other evidence we have summarized, supra, such mere fact alone, we think, supports a tenuous inference that the street because of some condition thereof was not reasonably safe; and, other evidence having been introduced tending to show a dangerous condition of the street causing plaintiff to fall, we believe the mere fact of itself that plaintiff fell could be correctly reached for by the jury as some evidence that the condition was dangerous and added to such other evidence, and the evidence altogether to be correctly considered by the jury in determining whether the sho'wn condition rendered the street dangerous and not reasonably safe.

So we say that the mere fact of itself that a plaintiff has fallen on a street correctly should be said to be some evidence

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Bluebook (online)
319 S.W.2d 518, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rittershouse-v-city-of-springfield-mo-1959.