Russell v. Sincoe Realty Company

240 S.W. 147, 293 Mo. 428, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 7, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 147 (Russell v. Sincoe Realty Company) 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
Russell v. Sincoe Realty Company, 240 S.W. 147, 293 Mo. 428, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 33 (Mo. 1922).

Opinions

In the Circuit Court of Jackson County a demurrer was sustained to the plaintiff's petition. She declined to plead further, judgment for defendant was accordingly entered, and the plaintiff thereupon appealed to this court. *Page 431

The action is for personal injuries. The petition states that the defendant corporation was the owner of a certain lot in Kansas City, described; that a sidewalk runs alongside the property and was much frequented by pedestrians, a fact well known to the defendant; that at all the times mentioned in the petition a certain ordinance known as Section 563, Revised Ordinances of Kansas City, was in force and effect, as follows:

"Section 563. Snow, Etc. — Repairs. It shall be the duty of all persons owning or occupying any real property fronting upon any street to keep the sidewalk, curbing and guttering in front and alongside of said property and on the same side of the street in good repair and order, and to clean the same, and remove from any such sidewalk, curbing and guttering all ice, snow, earth or other substances that in any wise obstructs or renders the same dangerous, inconvenient or annoying to any person."

It is alleged that on December 10, 1919, plaintiff was walking north on said sidewalk alongside the property described, and while in the exercise of due care for her own safety, "by reason of the ice, snow and sleet which the defendant, its agents, servants and employees, had negligently allowed to accumulate, be and remain on said sidewalk she was caused to fall on said sidewalk and as a direct result thereof she was injured in the manner hereinafter set forth."

The petition then sets out the character of the injuries received by plaintiff and demands judgment for the sum of ten thousand dollars. The defendant demurred on the ground that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court sustained the demurrer, with result as stated.

I. The plaintiff with commendable directness thus states the issue:

"This case presents the sole proposition whether or not the violation of the ordinance referred to can be made the basis of a civil action for damages by one injured as a direct result of such violation." *Page 432

The following passage from Shearman Redfield on Negligence, sec. 343, is quoted with approval by this court in the case of Ford v. Kansas City, 181 Mo. 137, l.c. 147:

"An abutting owner, as such, owes no duty to maintain the street or sidewalk in front of his premises, and is not responsible for any defects therein which are not caused by his own wrongful act. . . . The fact that he violates a city ordinance, which requires abutting owners to remove snow and ice from the sidewalk in front of their premises within a certain time after their accumulation, does not render him liable to one injured by falling upon such snow and ice, nor to the city which had suffered judgment for the same injury."

The passage quoted states the law as determined by this court in numerous cases: Norton v. St. Louis, 97 Mo. 537; St. Louis v. Conn. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 107 Mo. 92; Baustian v. Young,152 Mo. 317; Hilliard v. Noe, 198 S.W. l.c. 436; 19 R.C.L. sec. 180, p. 880.

A city is under obligation to keep its streets and sidewalks in safe condition for travel, and if for any reason they become out of repair and are rendered dangerous by obstruction, defects, or accumulations of snow and ice, the city, where it has had notice of the condition, is liable to any person for injury caused by such condition. The appellant concedes the rule just mentioned frequently has been recognized and applied by this court, but earnestly insists that where the owner of adjacent property is affected by an ordinance, such as the one pleaded, he also is liable for injuries caused by his failure to obey such ordinance. The argument runs this way: In the exercise of certain police powers a municipality has authority to pass ordinances regulating the conduct of individuals. An ordinance requiring a property owner to remove snow and ice from the sidewalk adjacent to his premises, like an ordinance forbidding an obstruction in the street or sidewalk, or regulating the speed of vehicles on the street, is a proper exercise of police power. It has been held in several cases that a *Page 433 speed ordinance, an ordinance requiring an owner who is erecting a building adjacent to a sidewalk to cover the sidewalk for the protection of pedestrians, are ordinances passed in the exercise of police power possessed by a municipality. Violation of such an ordinance which results in injury renders the person violating it liable in damages to the person injured. Now, since the ordinance requiring the removal of snow and ice from the sidewalk in front of an owner's premises is a police regulation, a failure to obey the ordinance which results in injury to a pedestrian passing on the sidewalk renders the owner of the property liable. The argument is presented with clearness and force and illustrated by the citation of many authorities.

It proceeds, however, upon the theory that the only distinction between an ordinance, the violation of which would render the violator liable to one injured by it, and one on which there would be no liability is that the first is a police regulation and the other is not. In other words, every one who violates a police regulation, by which violation an injury ensues, incurs liability because it is a police regulation violated.

It will be noticed in the passage quoted from Shearman Redfield that an abutting property owner is not responsible for a defect in a sidewalk unless it is caused by his own wrongful act. If one places an obstruction on a sidewalk and another is injured by it, the injury is caused by his wrongful act. If an ordinance provides the manner in which he must prevent injury by reason of such obstruction a violation of the ordinance is negligence and may render him liable. If snow and ice accumulate upon the sidewalk, it is the duty of the city, not his duty, to remove it; he has no agency in creating the obstruction or causing the injury which may ensue. In that case he is not liable and the city cannot make him so by ordinance. The general principle announced in the Ford Case, supra, was cited approvingly in Kansas City v. Holmes, 274 Mo. l.c. 168, where it was held that a city may compel a citizen to keep his sidewalk free from obstruction, *Page 434 from snow, etc., at his own expense, and which quotes from the Ford Case without dissenting from the doctrine from Shearman Redfield quoted as above set out on the same page. In the case of Hilliard v. Noe, 198 S.W. 435, l.c. 436, the Springfield Court of Appeals, in an opinion by STURGIS, J., called attention to the same distinction by pointing out how it is generally held that the city, and not the lot owner, is liable for failure to keep a sidewalk free from snow and ice. But where the owner by any negligent or wrongful act causes an unsafe condition he is liable for any injury resulting from that condition.

The case of Sluder v. Transit Company, 189 Mo. 107, was an action for damages caused by a collision on account of defendant's failure, as claimed, to observe a vigilant watch ordinance. The court said, l.c. 132, in speaking of speed ordinances: "Such regulation is based upon the obvious necessity of compelling those who use powerful and dangerous agencies

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 147, 293 Mo. 428, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-sincoe-realty-company-mo-1922.