Steinmetz v. Nichols

180 S.W.2d 712, 352 Mo. 1047, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 577
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 2, 1944
DocketNo. 38790.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 180 S.W.2d 712 (Steinmetz v. Nichols) 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
Steinmetz v. Nichols, 180 S.W.2d 712, 352 Mo. 1047, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 577 (Mo. 1944).

Opinions

Action for $25,000 damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff when, on account of alleged negligence of defendants, he fell into a below-ground-level portion of an areaway in the rear of a building controlled by defendants. Judgment was entered on a verdict for defendants and plaintiff has appealed.

The defendants were collectively "University Trustees" under the last will and testament of William Rockhill Nelson, deceased, and, as such Trustees, they owned the real estate (where plaintiff was injured) and managed and controlled it for the benefit of the Trust Estate.

A building on the described real estate contained five business places and some apartments. In the rear of the building was a common court or driveway for use of all the tenants. One of the business places was a grocery store. This store building had been lengthened by a ten foot extension and a small areaway or recess (open on the south) was left between the west side of the extension and the east and south sides (rear) of the original building. The east part of the areaway was divided by an east-west guardrail consisting of parallel iron pipes supported by uprights set in concrete. On the north side of the guardrail, the areaway was open down to the basement floor fourteen feet below the top guardrail. This opening was completely surrounded on the north and east by the building and extension and on the west and south by guard rails. South of the open areaway was a tract three and one-half feet north and south by six feet east and west, bound on the north by the guardrail (between it and the opening) and on the east by the outside west wall of the extension. On this wall a utility company had located four electric light meter boxes (meters for tenants of the building). A demand meter box was located just below the north one of these meter boxes. Other meter boxes were located on the south wall of the extension (all located where they could be examined from the ground outside the building).

Subsequent to the placing of the meter boxes on the outside wall of the extension, Earl Juul, the tenant who operated the grocery store, asked and was granted permission by defendants' rental agent to locate an electric refrigeration motor on the ground below the meter *Page 1051 boxes which were on the west wall of the extension. Other tenants complained of the noise of the motor and Juul enclosed his electric refrigeration motor in a kind of a box or shed and put a table top and some two inch boards over it to keep out the rain. These boards did not quite cover the box on the north, next to the iron fence and open areaway. The box or shed was about three by four feet and three feet high. One could walk in on the west side of the shed (two foot space) and there were a few inches of space between the shed and the guardrail on the north. The top of the shed was a little higher than this guardrail and there was nothing to keep one from falling off the top or roof of the shed and into the open areaway on the north. After the shed had been constructed and covered, meter readers climbed on top of the shed to read the meters.

In June 1941, plaintiff, a chart changer (meter man) employed by the utility company, came to change the chart on the demand meter above the shed. He climbed on the roof of the shed to reach the meter box and experienced no difficulty. About September, 1941, defendants' general maintenance janitor and repair man, whose duty it was to supervise and clean up the common court or driveway, secured the permission of Mr. Juul (groceryman) to change the top of the shed by moving some of the boards off and putting others on. He acted [714] to satisfy complaints of another tenant's employees about a board extending out and interfering with the parking of bicycles. He took off the long board, which had caused the complaints, rearranged the top of the shed and put on some other material, referred to as plywood or crating, flimsy material, one-sixth or one-eighth inch in thickness and fastened on framing or panels. There were still some heavy boards over the shed, so that it felt solid, and a part of a table top could be seen under the flimsy material at the south end of the shed. On the north side of the shed, the flimsy material or plywood extended beyond the north wall of the shed and six inches to one foot out over the iron rail and open areaway. This extended material was not supported and, if weight were applied, it would give down. In order to see that there was nothing under this extended material one would have had "to walk around and look down under carefully." After exposure to the weather for about two months, this flimsy material buckled up, curled and appeared like a "corrugated box." It was weighted down on the shed top with bricks.

On the morning of November 1, 1941, plaintiff came again to change the chart on the demand meter above the shed. He first changed a chart on a demand meter on the south wall of the extension. From there, he could see a board or table top under the plywood or crating material on the shed and he could see the shed and its dimensions. From outside observation, the condition of the shed roof appeared little different from the way it did when he was there before. He made no particular inspection, but took it for granted that conditions *Page 1052 were the same. He could see that the top of the shed was "fiber boxing," but did not know what was under it, except the table top. He saw where the guardrail came over between the shed and the open areaway, but he noticed no infirmity of any kind in the top of the shed. He saw no warning signs, but did see the open areaway and paid no particular attention to how deep it was. He walked along the west side of the shed, until he was even with the north meter boxes, then he climbed upon the roof of the shed and moved east across the top of the shed to the demand meter box. He opened the box, changed the chart and closed the box. The bottom of the box was only about two inches above the top of the shed and, while on his knees on top of the shed facing east, he leaned forward, with his face nearly down to the shed roof, to see how to thread a little wire through the hasp in order to be able to seal the meter box. He was perhaps a little to the north of the meter box, near the north edge of the shed, using his right hand and he might have shifted his weight in having to move, when "all of a sudden the bottom gave away" and he fell down into the open areaway and was injured. "The roof gave away" and let him drop to the concrete floor on the basement level. Other facts will be stated in the course of the opinion.

Appellant contends that the trial court erred in giving Instructions G, H, I, and L at the request of defendants. Respondents deny these contentions, but insist that the court should have directed a verdict in their favor and that error, if any, in instructions is immaterial. Respondents contend that they are not liable in tort, either as individuals or as trustees of a charitable trust, and that, if they are liable in either capacity, the evidence fails to show any actionable negligence. In view of the conclusions we have reached with reference to the errors assigned, it will be unnecessary to determine the issues raised by respondents and to do so would unduly extend this opinion.

[1] Instruction G is as follows: "The Court instructs the jury that the mere fact plaintiff fell and was injured on the premises belonging to the Trust Estate, if so, does not of itself make defendants liable to him in damages in this action, for you are instructed that defendant Trustees were not, and in this action cannot be held, as insurers of the safety of said premises for use by plaintiff."

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W.2d 712, 352 Mo. 1047, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinmetz-v-nichols-mo-1944.