Stewart v. George B. Peck Co.

135 S.W.2d 405, 234 Mo. App. 864, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 93
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 135 S.W.2d 405 (Stewart v. George B. Peck Co.) 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
Stewart v. George B. Peck Co., 135 S.W.2d 405, 234 Mo. App. 864, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 93 (Mo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*867 BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $4000, and defendant has appealed.

The facts show that defendant operates a retail dry goods store in Kansas City; that about 3:00 P. M. of September 14, 1936, plaintiff, a married lady, 66 years of age, visited defendant’s store in company with her daughter for the purpose of shopping; that while her daughter was engaged in shopping on the first floor of defendant’s store, plaintiff started from that floor to the basement by means of a stairway. From the first floor the stairway led eastwardly down to a landing, at which point it turned to the south. There were four steps between the landing and the basement floor. Plaintiff fell and was injured at the second step from the bottom.

The steps of the stairway were of steel pan construction. The tread or surface consisted of a Mason tread which was attached to the steel pan. The space between the tread and the pan was filled with concrete. Machine screws were screwed into nuts set in the concrete, thereby fastening the tread to the construction beneath. The heads of the screws were about a quarter of an inch in diameter. The steps were 5 feet 8% inches long, 10% inches wide and 7% to 8 inches high. At the front edge and on the top of each step and running its full length was a metal tread 6 or 6% inches in width and to the rear of this tread there was a strip of linoleum covering the remainder of the top of the step. The top of the metal part of the tread, referred to in some parts of the record as a plate, was constructed with alternate ridges and grooves. These grooves were %G to Vi of an inch in depth. The metal tread or plate of each step was fastened with 14 to 16 machine screws. The screws were inserted in the step through holes located in the grooves. The steps had been constructed in the summer of 1935.

Plaintiff walked down the first flight of steps to the landing, proceeding along the right side of the stairway. When she reached the landing she walked over to the left side and started south down the remaining four steps to the basement, walking along the east or left *868 side of -the stairway with her left hand on the railing and her- pocket;book and gloves in her right hand. She was walking a foot or a foot and ahalf west of the railing. When plaintiff put her right foot on the last step and started to raise her left foot from the second step from the bottom something on the second step caught her left heel of her -shoe holding her heel and causing her to fall forward on to the basement floor, twisting her as she fell and breaking her left hip. Her heel did not catch on the-edge of .the step.

Plaintiff’s shoé was about 9% inches in length. It was about 5% inches from .the center of the ball to the front edge of the heel of the shoe. The shoe had a -military heel. Plaintiff testified that she might have had the point of her toe over the edge of the step when her heel caught; “the ball-of my foot was on the step;” that her heel was 4 to 5 inches from the outer edge of the step. “I would say 6 inches. ’ ’ At one place she said it was 6% inches.

After her fall the shoe which plaintiff was wearing at the time had a mark on the inside of the cap of the heel which mark did not go clear across but past the center. It was deeper on the right side.

Plaintiff’s son, who examined the steps shortly after her fall testified that he examined the second step from the bottom and found that the metal plate thereon was loose and that it rattled; that he tested it by tapping his foot on it; that he examined the screws in the plate and found a loose screw located 15 to 16 inches from the east rail or east end of the step; that this screw was set in one of the grooves.in the plate; that the top of the screw was level with the top of the ridges; that it was not down in the groove as were the other screws; that it had a bright shiny top on it; that “it had been walked on. Apparently it had been worn;” that it was loose in its hole; that it stood up the depth of the groove, which was about *4 of an inch; that he reached down and with his fingers he was able to pull the screw up a little; that dust and dirt had accumulated under the head of the screw; that “it was kind of a little cone shape, there was a little cone of dirt under it, the dirt was in the groove.”

On cross-examination he stated he saw no other screws sticking up; that there was but one screw that was raised -up even with the ridges of the place; that it did not protrude above any part of the plate, but if one would step on the plate then, the screw would protrude above the plate an eighth of an inch; that this screw was about one-half way back in the plate or about two or two and ahalf inches from the south' edge thereof and about 15 or 16 inches from the east end of the step.

Plaintiff’s witness, Carroll, testified that he was an architect; that he examined the step after plaintiff’s fall thereon; that he discovered that the “second-step was loose from the steel‘tread. Q. MIow did you test that out, Mr. Carroll? A. Well, I merely walked'’down the step and I got a looseness, a vibration, when-1 stepped on this metal *869 tread;” that he examined the step and found.that two or three of .the metal screws were loose; that. one of these ■ metal screws had worked its way up level with the top of the tread and was very shiny, indicating that there had been-traffic- over the screw; -that-until the .plate was stepped ¡upon the screw did not-protrude above the ¡top. of the tread. “When. I walked on the tread that forced, the .screwhead .up above the surface of the-tread.' . . . Well, I would-say at least an eighth, of an inch;” that he found considerable dirt and debris under the screw, “it was just the funnel shape of .the. screw-;” that the screw would protrude above- the-level of the- plate when the latter was stepped upon; that this screw, was 16 inches from the ¡east end of the step and perhaps 2y2 inches from- the south edge; that there was only one screw that “stuck up” but “I think I would be willing to testify that there must have been other screws. loose to cause that condition;” that he examined the rest of the screws and found “some in the grooves and some missing entirely.” When asked hew much the plate moved when stepped upon, he said: “I think it would be rather ■ difficult unless you had a micrometer, or something to, guage that distance, to do that. ... I wouldn’t say it would be an infinitesinal distance, no; ” that the plate ‘ ‘ came up perhaps as much as the screw came up, might have been a fraction-of an inch.”

Plaintiff’s witness, Dean, another architect, testified that he examined the plate after plaintiff fell on the step and found it loose; that he tested the plate- by putting the ball of his foot on it and bringing his weight down on it; that “it made a hollow noise when you stood away from it and tapped the ball,of your foot on it;” that he found a screw loose on the plate; that this screw was not “quite centered -in the grove.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W.2d 405, 234 Mo. App. 864, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-george-b-peck-co-moctapp-1939.