Smith v. Seven-Eleven, Inc.

430 S.W.2d 764, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 639
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 26, 1968
Docket8719
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 430 S.W.2d 764 (Smith v. Seven-Eleven, Inc.) 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
Smith v. Seven-Eleven, Inc., 430 S.W.2d 764, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 639 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

As plaintiff Rose Smith (hereinafter sometimes referred to as plaintiff) was leaving one of defendant’s markets in . Springfield, Missouri, about 1 P.M. on Sunday, October 31, 1965, she fell and fractured her right ankle. In Count I of the petition filed in this action, she sought damages for her injury; and, in Count II of that petition, plaintiff Elmer Smith, her husband, sought damages for loss of her services and companionship and for medical and hospital expenses incident to her treatment. With defendant standing on its motion for directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence, the jury found for both plaintiffs and assessed plaintiff Rose’s damages at $2,000 and plaintiff Elmer’s damages at $500. But, in response to defendant’s timely after-trial motion, the trial court set aside the judgment on both counts and entered judgment, for defendant in accordance with its motion for a directed verdict [V.A.M.R. Rule 72.02] upon the stated ground that plaintiff Rose “failed to make a submissible case as to any negligence of the defendant being the proximate cause of plaintiff’s fall and injuries sustained.” Plaintiffs appeal.

The store, at which plaintiff fell, was situate on the northwest corner of South National Avenue and East Bennett Street, facing east toward National. Customers entered by traversing a small graveled area in front of the store and then ascending a flight of three steps. The photographic *766 exhibit shows the steps to have been of no more than ordinary height and quite broad in both width and depth — deep enough that, as plaintiff commented, “I . . . almost make two steps on each step.” A continuous strip of rubber matting, of the same width as the entrance, extended from the entrance across the tread, over the edge, and down the riser of each step (in the fashion of a stairway runner) and' for a distance of several feet over the graveled area at the foot of the steps. The matting was held in place by a horizontal, strip fastened through the matting to the bottom of each riser. The only negligence pleaded in plaintiffs’ petition and submitted in their verdict-directing instruction was that of defendant in allegedly “maintaining a rubber mat on said steps which was old and worn and in which there were holes, and which was loosely and not securely fastened to said steps.”

Our appellate inquiry with respect to the sufficiency of the evidence to make a submissible case must be confined to that submitted assignment of negligence; 1 and in that inquiry we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs and accord to them the benefit of all supporting inferences fairly and reasonably deducible from the evidence, tempered only by the wise, judicious limitation that this rule calls for consideration of all, not merely an isolated part or parts, of the facts shown by plaintiffs and does not require or authorize the court to supply missing evidence, or to give plaintiffs the benefit of forced or unreasonable inferences, or to disregard the dictates of common reason and accept that which, on the whole record, obviopsly is not true. 2

Plaintiff Rose, then 62 years of age and wearing “ordinary walking shoes” with a “military heel . . . [an] inch and a half or so” in height, had gone to defendant’s store “to get pop and cigarettes” for her husband. As she entered the store, she noticed nothing unusual about the steps or entrance. In response to the first invitation on direct examination to “tell the jury what happened as you started to leave,” plaintiff offered this narrative account: “Well, I paid for my purchase and came out, started down the steps and my heel caught on something and I fell and I sprained my left ankle and broke my right one.” It was “the left heel” that “caught on something.” The result was that “I fell to the right of the steps .... My back hit the lower step.” When counsel pressed for more detailed information concerning the accident, the following answers were elicited: “Q. Do you know which step it was that your left ankle, foot and heel caught on? A. Well, I think it was the middle step here . . . . Q. And at the time this happened, did you know what caught your ankle? A. No, I didn’t. Q. What did it feel like?. A. Well, it just— something, my heel was caught in something and it didn’t seem to want to let go.” Plaintiffs’-appellants’ counsel tuck into their statement of facts only the foregoing indefinite, inconclusive and incomplete information gleaned from the initial third of plaintiff Rose’s direct examination, as recorded on six pages of her transcribed testimony. However, plaintiff’s uncertain answers in that early direct examination were but an introduction to the testimonial state of compounded confusion which developed during the remaining two-thirds of her direct, and thereafter during her cross, redirect, recross and further redirect, examina *767 tion as preserved on more than forty additional pages.

Plaintiff had been interrogated by defendant’s representatives on two occasions prior to trial, to wit, (1) in her hospital room on November 1, 1965, the day after her accident, when a question-and-answer statement was taken by one Todd, “a man from the insurance company,” and (2) in her home on November 8, 1966, when her deposition was taken. As shown in the transcript on appeal, the question-and-answer statement taken by Todd included the following: “Q. You were on your way out of the store when this happened? A. Yes, I was going down the steps, I was on the last step and stepped to the ground and I must have stepped in a hole or something, a rock or something, that turned that ankle . . . . Q. It was your left ankle that turned with you first? A. Yes . . . . Q. So it happened when you actually stepped on the ground? A. Yes. Q. That is when it seemed to turn? A. Yes.” And among the questions and answers in the deposition were these: “Q. . . [D]o I understand you, Mrs. Smith, you don’t know whether your foot or shoe caught on something or if you stepped on something, a rock or hole or anything else that— A. No, I can’t tell you what the object was or what did it. Your mind is not on things like that when you are hurting like I was hurting. Q. You can’t tell us you did fall or turn your ankle because of a hole? A. No, I can’t; I have told you over and over, I can’t tell you what made me fall or threw me, it happened there on their property and place and I can’t tell you what. Q. Yes, maam, but whether it was you stepping in the hole— A. Or on the steps or what. Q. Or catching your foot or shoe on the steps or mat, you don’t know, is that correct? . . . A. Yes. Q. You just don’t know? A. No, I don’t, I have said that all the time.”

The following questions and answers in plaintiff’s testimony upon trial are particularly interesting and perhaps significant: “Q. So do you know for a fact whether or not this [rubber] mat . had anything to do with your fall? A. Not till I noticed the picture [the photographic exhibit taken on December 9, 1965] and it showed that it could’ve happened that way . . . . Q. Well, it [plaintiff’s narrative account to Todd] is a different story than you have told the jury here today, that your heel caught on something and caused you to fall from the steps. A. Well, it’s just like I said, I must have stepped on something, a rock or something. It’s just the same as if I caught my heel on the step. I don’t know what made me fall.

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Bluebook (online)
430 S.W.2d 764, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-seven-eleven-inc-moctapp-1968.