Roberts v. City of Piedmont

148 S.W. 119, 166 Mo. App. 1, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 510
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 119 (Roberts v. City of Piedmont) 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
Roberts v. City of Piedmont, 148 S.W. 119, 166 Mo. App. 1, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 510 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REYNOLDS-, P. J.

— While plaintiff, in company with her young daughter, was walking along Green street in the city of Piedmont, she was crossing over what she took for a sidewalk on the side of that street where it crosses West Third street. There was an open ditch alongside of Green street, three feet deep and about four feet wide, walled up with stone and cement, the ditch extending to where the one street crosses the other and perhaps beyond. This ditch was open along Green street to Third street and for some distance east and west therefrom. The night was -dark and rainy and between 7 and 10 o ’clock, while plaintiff was going from the house of a friend, where she had been visiting, to the house of a brother-in-law, at which she was temporarily staying, she fell off of this sidewalk into this ditch with the result that beside sustaining bruises and hurts, she sustained a fracture of the right patella or kneecap. She was picked up and carried to the house of her brother and subsequently several wire stitches were taken in the kneecap. She was afterwards removed to her own home [5]*5in Kennett. There she remained under the care of physicians and surgeons for some time after the'injury. One of these surgeons testified that there would be some permanent injury to the lmee and deformity and that ankylosis had resulted or would result. This surgeon would not undertake to say how long this con - dition would continue, but said that while it had been treated with good results so far as practicable, plaintiff in all probability would be permanently lame or halting in her walk. He hardly thought she would ever recover the entire free use of the knee.

Alleging the facts connected with her movements on the night of the injury and the condition of the street and sidewalk and that there were no lights of any kind on the streets or at this particular point, and the accident, substantially as- above, plaintiff brought her action against the city for $10,000.

The answer, after a general denial, averred contributory negligence, charging that whatever injuries plaintiff may have received- from falling into the ditch, if any, were and are the direct and proximate result of her own negligent and careless conduct in that plaintiff, on the way to her brother’s house where she was staying, from that of a friend at whose house she had been visiting, came on to Green street, the principal street of the city of Piedmont, a block west of where the accident occurred and instead of going to her brother’s house by the most direct; usually travelled, and safe streets, which said route and streets were fully known to plaintiff, had, in disregard of her duty, negligently, carelessly and recklessly undertaken to go to her brother’s house “through the exceeding darkness over a rough, dangerous and untraveled route, and much further in point of distance, and while undertaking to go to her brother’s house over this rough, dangerous and untravelled way, she fell off of a bridge into a ditch, resulting in her injuries.”

[6]*6The reply was a general denial of these averments, specifically denying any contributory negligence. •

There was evidence tending to show that while plaintiff had lived in Piedmont for a number of years and in a general way knew the streets of that city and had lived not very far from that locality, she had not lived there for the past thirteen years, living for most of that time at Kennett and other places. She testified positively that she was not aware of this bridge or sidewalk across or along this ditch and that on the night in question she undertook to go to her brother’s by a short cut which she thought she knew but had not been over the part of it covered by the intersection of these two streets. Starting from the house of her friend at night to go to her brother’s, it then being dark and raining, and no street lights, she missed an alleyway that she should have taken as the usual and most accessible route to her brother’s and passing that came on to where Third street crosses Green street and started to walk along this and up a hill by a short cut to her brother’s house. She testifies that when she struck this crossing — a board one — she supposed that she was on the plank sidewalk of the street and recognizing that to keep on from there to reach her brother’s house she would have to climb up a path that led up a hill and through rock, she was afraid to attempt it at night and turned to retrace her steps, still imagining that she was on the sidewalk. As she stepped back to get on to Green street she stepped off this sidewalk, which in point of fact seems to be a bridging over the ditch, and fell into the ditch, thereby sustaining the injuries before set out. She lay there some little time, when her brother and perhaps others came to her assistance and carried her to her brother’s house where, as before stated, she remained until taken to her home at Kennett .

[7]*7The contention of the learned counsel for appellant is, that having two ways, one safe and the other dangerous, if the plaintiff chose the dangerous one she cannot recover for the injuries following. The trouble with this contention is that there is no evidence in the case to show that plaintiff knew of this dangerous place. There were no ordinary street lights of any kind; plaintiff had no lantern; there was no danger sign, red light or warning of any kind at this crossing, nor along this part of the street, no coping or railing of any kind on the sides of this bridge or walk, and it was a dangerous path to one unfamiliar with it. Plaintiff is not to be charged with knowledge of this danger by the mere fact of her residence in the city or her general familiarity with the streets, for she testifies positively, and in this is not contradicted, that she did not know of this particular crossing or of its condition and had gotten on to it by mistake in the darkness. As was held by óur Supreme Court in Buesching v. The St. Louis Gaslight Co., 73 Mo. 219, the court, on a demurrer to the evidence, could not infer knowledge of the existance of this dangerous place from the single fact that plaintiff had for several years lived in the vicinitlv of this crossing. Much less could it be here held, as a matter of law, that because she had formerly lived in Piedmont, it must be inferred that she knew of the dangers of the route she selected, in the face of her positive and uncontradicted testimony that she did not know of it. Nor were there any facts in evidence, apart from that of her previous residence in Piedmont, from which the jury had a right to infer knowledge by plaintiff of this dangerous place.

Complaint is made by learned counsel for appellant that the petition in the case does not state a cause of action or that there is a variance between the averments of the petition and the facts in evidence. We are unable to discover a variance and while, when the testimony was first offered, there was an objection to [8]*8the reception of any evidence on the ground that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, there was no demurrer to the petition and we are unable to say that the action of the court in overruling this motion was incorrect, or that the petition is so defective that it cannot support the judgment. Although the facts may have been defectively stated, they are stated with sufficient particularity to constitute a cause of action and the variance between the facts alleged and the facts in proof is neither substantial nor material.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 119, 166 Mo. App. 1, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-city-of-piedmont-moctapp-1912.