State Ex Rel. Golloday v. Shain

110 S.W.2d 719, 341 Mo. 889, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 526
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 9, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 719 (State Ex Rel. Golloday v. Shain) 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
State Ex Rel. Golloday v. Shain, 110 S.W.2d 719, 341 Mo. 889, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 526 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

*890 FRANK, J.

Certiorari to quash an opinion of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the ease of Dollie Myers v. H. L. Golloday and the Fox Theatre Company, a Corporation. In that case plaintiff recovered a judgment of $4000 for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by a fall on a waxed floor in the lobby of defendants’ theater located in Brookfield, Missouri. This proceeding was brought to quash the opinion of the Court of Appeals affirming that judgment.

At the trial of the Dolly Myers case in the circuit court defendants’ demurrer to the evidence was overruled. That ruling was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. Relator contends that such ruling is in conflict with the ruling of this court on a similar state of facts in the case of Ilgenfritz v. Missouri Power & Light Company, 340 Mo. 648, 101 S. W. (2d) 973. That part of the opinion of the Court of Appeals pertinent to this question follows:

"It is true that a verdict based upon mere guess, conjecture, supposition, and speculation cannot stand and that a verdict, to stand, must be based upon competent, substantial evidence. The authorities cited in their brief by defendants under this complaint fully sustain such proposition. It is, unnecessary to review them. However, we cannot agree with defendants in their contention that plaintiff’s evidence directed to a showing of the condition of the floor at the time plaintiff fell thereon, as being slick and unsafe and dangerous to walk on by reason of wax, oil, or other substance negligently placed thereon by defendants, was based on mere conclusions, speculations, conjectures, and suppositions of witnesses. We do not think that plaintiff’s evidence is subject to such criticism. Such facts were shown by substantial and competent testimony of witnesses who passed over the floor at or about the same time with plaintiff who testified substantially to the fact that, at the time plaintiff fell thereon, the floor presented a smooth, glossy, ‘shiny,’ and slick appearance and that it was in fact slick and slippery so that one was liable to slip thereon. The testimony of plaintiff shows that, at the time she fell, she slid thereon and that her whole body scooted on the floor after she fell and that the floor was slick and ‘shiny’ looking. The testimony of Mrs. Straub, her sister, who was with her at the time, was that she observed after plaintiff, fell that the floor was slick — that it looked slick and that it was slick. Being asked if she said that it was slick because her sister fell on it, she replied, ‘I said I noticed the floor after she *891 fell, and I noticed it was slick.’ She was asked, ‘Why do yon say it was slick?’ and answered, ‘Because it’was slick.’ Mrs. Lotus Snider, a witness for plaintiff, was asked to tell what she observed about the floor on the day that plaintiff fell and answered: ‘I observed when I went in the front — my cousin was right behind me— I got ahold of her arm to keep from slipping. It was sort of a polished linoleum.’ Miss Earleen Snider, a witness for plaintiff, was asked to tell what she noticed about the floor on the day that plaintiff fell and replied, ‘Well, I noticed it being a little bit slick. I guess I noticed because she — ’ referring to her cousin, Mrs. Lotus Snider — ‘slid when we went in, and on account of it being damp on. the outside, too.’ She was asked if she had noticed its being slick before and answered that she had and that she always noticed the floor and exercised particular caution on that account. Mrs. Ethel Moling, a witness for plaintiff, testified that she noticed the floor was rather slick and so watched her step. Mrs. Irene Christy, a witness for plaintiff, w'as asked the following questions on her cross-examination and made the following answers thereto:
“ ‘Q. Now, did you notice anything about the floor there? A. Very slick. . . .
“ ‘Q. What did you notice? Describe the condition of the floor. A. Slick, bright finish.
“ 'Q. How? A. Just a slick, glassy-looking finish.
“ ‘Q. And it looked glassy, is that what you mean, Mrs. Christy, The floor looked shiny? A. Yes; shiny.
“ ‘Q. And because it looked shiny and glassy, that’s why you say it was very slick, is it? A. I know it was slick. You know how you walk across a slick floor and kind of slip on it.
“ ‘Q. How’s that? A. You can walk across a slick floor and kind of slip on it.
“ ‘Q. Did you slip on it? A. Not enough to fall, but you could feel a slick substance. You know' how it is when you walk over a slick floor. ’
“On her redirect examination, she w'as asked the following questions and made the following answers:
“ ‘Q. Describe W'hat the effect was in walking over this floor. A. A slick, slippery condition.
“ ‘Q. How's that? A. A slick, slippery condition.’
“Again on her recross-examination, the following questions w'ere asked her and the following answers were made:
“ ‘Q. Now, you say that it was in a slippery condition. Now, just tell us w'hy you say that? A. Well, I just noticed as I w'alked in — I really can’t tell you. You know the feeling of walking on—
“ ‘Q. (interrupting) Isn’t it just because it looked shiny that you say that? A. No, you' have a feeling this—

(Interruption and colloquy of court and counsel.)

*892 “ ‘Q. I believe you made an answer to a question in answer to Mr. Owen to the effect that by walking on it you knew it was slick? A. Yes, sir.
“ ‘Q. Now, explain wbat you mean by that. A. Well, whenever you step on a slick object you can feel your feet slide.
“ ‘Q. Did your feet slide? A. They didn’t slide out from under me, but you can feel them slide back.
“ ‘Q. Did your feet slide back that day? A. Yes, sir.
“ ‘Q. Both of your feet? A. Not at the same time, but when you step on an object like that you can feel it.’
“There is, thus, direct, affirmative, competent evidence that the floor in question was in a slick, slippery, unsafe, and dangerous condition by witnesses who walked upon and saw the same.
“There is likewise evidence that the floor in question had been regularly treated twice a week since it was laid, May 4, 1935, with a wax preparation known as Lightning Luster and that it had been treated with such preparation two days prior to plaintiff’s injury thereon. That is, said preparation had been applied to the floor over its entire surface with a brush dipped in the preparation and brushed over the floor, giving to the floor a highly-finished appearance, , a smooth and glossy finish. Such preparation was about nine per cent wax, three per cent other solids, and the balance water.

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110 S.W.2d 719, 341 Mo. 889, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-golloday-v-shain-mo-1937.