Stafford v. Fred Wolferman, Inc.

307 S.W.2d 468, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 589
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 9, 1957
Docket45774
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 307 S.W.2d 468 (Stafford v. Fred Wolferman, Inc.) 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
Stafford v. Fred Wolferman, Inc., 307 S.W.2d 468, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 589 (Mo. 1957).

Opinions

VAN OSDOL, Commissioner.

Action for personal injuries sustained when plaintiff fell as she was going down the stairway upon her departure from the balcony restaurant in defendant’s store. Plaintiff alleged her injuries were due to negligence of defendant in permitting water to remain on the stairs, or in failing lo warn plaintiff of the presence of the water which, it was alleged, caused the stairs to be slick, slippery and dangerous, and not reasonably safe. A jury returned a verdict awarding plaintiff $13,000 in damages,- and defendant has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

Defendant-appellant contends the trial court’ erred in overruling defendant’s motions for a directed verdict, in instructing the jury, and in the admission of evidence. Defendant-appellant also contends the jury’s award was excessive.

Defendant’s store on Walnut Street in Kansas City is on the west side of the street, and as a patron or customer of defendant’s balcony restaurant passes from the sidewalk into the store, the patron walks through two double front doors, and turning to the left walks southwardly approximately seventeen feet. Here the patron is at the foot of the stairway leading to the balcony restaurant; and again turning to the left in proceeding up the stairway the patron moves up five steps to a landing and thence, turning to the right around a newel post and banister, moves up a flight of steps to another landing from which the patron, again turning to the right, moves up three steps (including the step to the balcony-floor level) to the balcony-restaurant floor. The steps to the balcony-floor level are a little more than three and one-half feet in width; the depth of the treads is ten and one-half inches; and the risers are seven inches high. There is no defect in construction, and the steps are covered with a type of linoleum tile which is said to be reasonably safe as a covering of stairs and floors in stores.

In the morning of December 23, 1953, plaintiff was downtown shopping. It was a little after eleven o’clock when she arrived at Wolferman’s for lunch. She had patronized the store for years, and had dined at the balcony restaurant many times. The day was -clear, but there was an accumulation of four or five inches (or more) of snow on the ground which had fallen the two preceding days. The snow generally had been cleaned from the sidewalks, but there was, nevertheless, slush on the walks tracked on by pedestrians who had walked through snow and slush in crossing the intersections of streets. Plaintiff wore galoshes, the kind that “zip up in front.”

Plaintiff testified that, as she went up the stairway to the balcony restaurant, there were other people going up “before and behind” her. There were quite a lot of people in the restaurant at the time, [471]*471and other people continued to come into the restaurant while plaintiff was having lunch. (Six hundred and one persons patronized the defendant’s balcony restaurant December 23, 1953.) At twelve forty-five, plaintiff, having eaten, approached the cashier’s desk on the right side of the “stairway going down” and paid for her lunch. She retained in her right hand two dollar bills of the “change,” returned to her by the cashier, in anticipation of making minor purchases as she was going down through the ground-floor store; she also had a small paper package or bag in her right hand; her purse was “on” her left hand. No other person was going up or down the stairway at the time. She had never paid any attention to the railing along the right side of the stairway (as one goes down), although she knew of the banister on the left. As she stepped down she saw a “shininess, but it didn’t register with me at the time it was water and I was on it (the first step below the balcony floor) and then I fell down the stairs. * * * As I stepped down on the first step I slipped in this water and fell down the stairway.” Plaintiff was rendered unconscious. The next thing she remembered was that she was in a sitting position on the first (or second) step above the (upper) landing, and a man was easing her right arm. The bottom of her skirt and her stockings were wet. She saw water on the stairs — “It looked like — you know what slush is, and it has melted? That is what it looked like.”

One Louis Hyll, a patron, testified that he saw plaintiff when she was “in the middle oi* beginning of her fall.” She fell face downward on the landing. The witness and another went to her assistance. The witness said that in assisting plaintiff he was reluctant to kneel on the steps because of the “filth and dirtiness of the traffic that was on the steps * * * sort of a dampness and dirt generally. Now that is just from traffic, slush mostly, I would say, that was tracked in.” He further described the “dampness and dirt” as a combination of salt and cinders “or something they put on the streets in order to keep things from slipping, and it was sort of dirt and soot mixture and black and it was damp.”

Plaintiff’s husband testified that, when he learned of his wife’s injury, he immediately went to defendant’s store. When he arrived his wife was sitting on the first or second step below the balcony floor. A man (Louis Hyll) was supporting her right arm. The husband was informed that a physician and an ambulance had been called, and during the ten minutes which elapsed before the ambulance arrived, the husband knelt beside the wife. Pie observed that the steps “clear up to the balcony level” were wet. “Right away I felt the water on my knees, the dampness coming through to my skin.”

Defendant’s balcony-restaurant manager, testified that the store floor and the steps of the stairway were cleaned, mopped and dried each morning before ten o’clock in anticipation of the opening of the store at ten and the restaurant at eleven. Thereafter, during the day there was no periodic inspection; although there is a boy on duty all the time on the first floor to pick up or clean anything that is spilled, or if it is raining to mop up. The witness and others in defendant’s employ wouldn’t have occasion to go up and down the stairway very often in the course of a day, but, “Well, we would just try to watch those things. If they (the steps) got wet or any moisture on them have them wiped up. The same way with the floor.”

When plaintiff slipped, fell and was injured, she felt a “click” in her right arm and experienced severe pain. She had suffered a subglenoid dislocation of the right shoulder, the ball or head of the humerus was completely dislocated; a fracture of the tubercle of the humerus; and a tear in the joint capsule which holds the two sections of the joint together. In the fracture of the tubercle, a fragment of a bone three-fourths of an inch by one-half inch was [472]*472completely detached from the shaft of the bone. Normally the muscles initiating abduction, that is, raising the arm outwardly, are attached to the tubercle. There also was nerve involvement due to the stretching of the brachial plexis, the nerves that go from the shoulder out into the arm.

Plaintiff was taken by ambulance to the hospital and to the emergency room where she was given sedatives and narcotics to ease her excruciating pain. She was prepared for and brought to surgery, given an anesthetic and the dislocation reduced. By means of a body cast from the shoulders down to the hips, with spica or strut to hold the arm in abduction, the bone fragment was maintained in apposition during the process of healing. Plaintiff was in the hospital twenty-one days; and the cast was removed in approximately seven weeks.

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Bluebook (online)
307 S.W.2d 468, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stafford-v-fred-wolferman-inc-mo-1957.