Spaulding v. City of Edina

78 S.W. 302, 104 Mo. App. 45, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 444
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 302 (Spaulding v. City of Edina) 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
Spaulding v. City of Edina, 78 S.W. 302, 104 Mo. App. 45, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 444 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

The suit is to recover damages alleged in the petition to have resulted from a fall by plaintiff, caused by a defective sidewalk negligently maintained on the side of one of its streets by the defendant city. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The verdict was for the plaintiff which, on motion of defendant, the court set aside and awarded a new trial, assigning as reasons for its action, first, “on account of newly discovered evidence since the trial,” and second, “on the further ground that the verdict is against the greater weight of the evidence in the cause.” Prom the order setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial plaintiff duly appealed.

The evidence is voluminous and we will content [48]*48ourselves with a brief statement of what we find it tends to prove. For plaintiff it tends to prove that on the night of October 17, 1900, she and her husband were walking side by side on the east side of Main street between Jackson and Smallwood streets in the defendant city, when her husband stepped on the end of a loose board in the sidewalk causing it to fly up, and plaintiff, in the act of stepping, caught her foot under the board and was thrown forward, falling on the sidewalk with such force as to knock her senseless for the time being; that after recovering from the immediate shock caused by the fall, with the aid of her husband, she walked to her home (a short distance). She testified that the fall caused her such great pain that she had to take morphine before she could sleep; that since the fall and down to the day of the trial she had suffered almost continuously from severe pain in her backand in the back of her head; that there is a sore spot between her shoulders from which the pain seems to start and then runs into the back of her head like wires; that at times these pains shoot down her spine causing a heavy sensation in her lower limbs and feet and that this condition has continually grown worse since her fall; that she is unable to either sit or stand with her back in 'an erect position; that prior to and up to the day of her fall she was in good health and flesh, and was strong and weighed from one hundred and sixty-five to one hundred and seventy pounds.

She further testified that she had frequently passed over the sidewalk before her fall and knew that some of the boards in it were loose, and that the walk was out of repair, but it was the usual and direct route to and from her home to the town and she could not have reached her home on the night of her injury without going a considerable distance out of her way; that when she fell she was walking along in the usual way, was looking at the boards in front of her; that the walk was used by other people and she had no idea but that she [49]*49could walk over it in safety. She also testified that about thirteen months prior to falling on the walk she fell about three or four feet down a stairway hurting her right shoulder and that the soreness in her shoulder continued for a few days thereafter, but she suffered no discomfort from the stairway fall and after its occurrence she never had better health in her life up to the time she fell on the sidewalk.

Dr. Jergin testified that plaintiff called on him the last of October or the first of November, 1900, for treatment for the injury she claimed to have received from the fall on the sidewalk; that at the time she complained of intense pain in the back of her neck, head and shoulder; that he prescribed for her and continued to do so until the last of November when he moved away from the town; that he had examined her once since; that there was no change in her condition except in her appearance and loss of flesh; that she was suffering from a nervous affliction known as localized neuritis which could be causéd by a fall or shock, and that the injury plaintiff complained of could be caused by the fall she had on the sidewalk and in his judgment the fall did cause the injury. Dr. Jergin’s evidence was corroborated by that of Dr. Brown who treated plaintiff in January, 1901.

The sidewalk was constructed by laying three parallel stringers lengthwise on the street and nailing .boards crosswise thereon. The evidence for plaintiff is that the stringers in the sidewalk .where plaintiff fell were so rotten that they Would not hold nails; that some of the boards were loose and- that this defective condition was observable to anyone passing over the sidewalk.

The evidence further shows that John F. Beal, a member of the board of aldermen of defendant city, frequently passed over the sidewalk before plaintiff’s fall on it. Samuel Randolph testified that he was street commissioner of the defendant city for six years prior [50]*50to May, 1900, and was well acquainted with the sidewalk in question; that it was in bad condition in April, 1900; that in an effort to repair the walk, he drove nails in the stringers to fasten down the loose boards but the stringers were so rotten they would not hold the nails. The evidence also is that the walk was not repaired between the months of April and November, 1900.

For the defendant the evidence tends to show that the surface' of the walk appeared to be in good condition and that the stringers were not all rotten, but were partially decayed, and to a casual observer no defects appeared to exist in the sidewalk.

Dr. O’Brien testified for defendant that he lived just across the street from plaintiff in the year 1899 and 1900; that in 1899 plaintiff, in a conversation with him, stated that she had spells with hér back and felt feeble; that she had pains through her body and could not endure what she had endured at other times; that she had fallen down stairs and it had injured her very much; that early in the spring of 1900 he had a second conversation with her; that she was carrying a hoe at the time and he said to her that she ought not to do such hard work, and she replied that if she had the strength she once had she would not mind such work, but her health was not as good as it used to be, and she did not have the same endurance as in former years; that since she had fallen down stairs she did not feel quite so well; that he concluded she was suffering from rheumatism and female weaknesses ; that he never examined her and never prescribed for her; that she never consulted him as a physician; that he noticed the plaintiff at her ordinary work about her house until up to the time he removed to St. Louis (November 26, 1900). He gave it as his opinion that plaintiff’s present condition could not have been caused by the fall on the sidewalk, but was caused by the fall on the stairway "imd excess of urea in her system.

Dr. Campbell testified that he was consulted by [51]*51plaintiff after she fell down the stairway bnt not after she fell on the sidewalk, and, in his opinion, her condition was caused by the fall on the stairway which condition was aggravated by the fall on the sidewalk.

Mrs. Freel testified that she met plaintiff after she had fallen down the stairway and plaintiff was all doubled over and said she had fallen down a stairway in a kind of twist and did not believe she would ever get over it, that she got a twist in the fall.

With the motion to set aside the verdict for new trial was filed the affidavit of the city attorney and the affidavits of the newly discovered witnesses. The affidavits of the witnesses are as follows:

“Mrs. Ellen McKendry, on her oath states: That she now resides in the city of Edina, Knox county, Missouri and that she is acquainted with Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Spaulding v. City of Edina
97 S.W. 545 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 302, 104 Mo. App. 45, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spaulding-v-city-of-edina-moctapp-1904.