Stith v. J. J. Newberry Co.

79 S.W.2d 447, 336 Mo. 467, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 589
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 8, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 79 S.W.2d 447 (Stith v. J. J. Newberry Co.) 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
Stith v. J. J. Newberry Co., 79 S.W.2d 447, 336 Mo. 467, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 589 (Mo. 1935).

Opinions

This case comes to the writer on a rehearing granted on the court's own motion for reasons hereafter mentioned. [1] The first opinion, concurred in by all the court, was written by Commissioner HYDE and his statement of the case with slight modifications is now adopted, with the preliminary observation that the fact that both parties to a case take an appeal to this court does not make two cases in this court. It is but one case regardless of there being cross-appeals or appeals by any number of parties. Any party to a suit aggrieved by the judgment may take an appeal in that case (Sec. 1018, R.S. 1929), and when both parties appeal, Section 1032, Revised Statutes 1929, provides for only one transcript or abstract of the record in the appellate court and the terms on which the party not furnishing and paying for it in the first instance may have the benefit thereof and be heard thereon. There is but one case on appeal, though several appellants, and no need of a separate docketing or consolidation of such appeals.

This is an action for personal injuries, from the result of which both plaintiff and defendant Newberry Company appeal. Plaintiff's injuries were caused by a fall on ice which had accumulated on the sidewalk in front of the store of the defendant Newberry Company in Hannibal. The trial court, at the close of all the evidence, sustained a demurrer to the evidence as to defendant Johnson, the manager of the store, and from the court's action relative thereto plaintiff appeals. Plaintiff had a verdict of the jury and judgment against defendant Newberry Company for $10,000, from which it appeals.

The petition herein charges that defendant Newberry Company operated a merchandise establishment and store at Hannibal, Missouri, with officers, agents, and representatives in charge thereof, and that said company and its officers and agents, including defendant Johnson, in charge of and operating the same for it were joint tort-feasors in the wrong herein complained of. Plaintiff's theory was that snow and ice collected on both an awning and the protective structure above it, which melted on the day of her injury, so that water dripped onto the sidewalk and froze, forming a strip of ice across it, because of which she fell to her injury. This negligence is specifically charged in plaintiff's petition as follows:

"Plaintiff states that long before the accident and injuries herein complained of, and at the time thereof, the defendants had wrongfully and carelessly and negligently maintained and operated on and at the front of the store building so occupied by them and over and adjoining the sidewalk leading past the said J.J. Newberry store, at a place constantly used by many pedestrians, an awning extending across the entire front of said store building and which awning during the season of the year when the accident and injury herein complained of occurred, and at other times, was designed to *Page 477 be drawn or rolled up so that the same would lie close to the front of the building, and when properly rolled up was intended to fit into and under a boxed-up construction which protected same from the weather and was intended to prevent the accumulation of ice, snow and water in the folds of said awning.

"Plaintiff states that at and prior to the time of her injury hereinafter described said awning was negligently, carelessly and wrongfully operated and rolled up by defendants so that the folds thereof were not covered or protected by said super-structure hereinbefore mentioned and so maintained that snow, ice and water did collect therein and the cloth of said awning was allowed to slack or be so placed that folds or pockets were formed and that said folds and pockets had become and were at the time receptacles for the accumulation of snow, ice and water, and that they then and for a long time before had contained such accumulations; and further plaintiff says that said awning and box super-structure was so negligently, unskillfully and carelessly maintained, operated and used by defendants that rain, ice and snow were negligently and carelessly permitted by defendants to form and remain thereon and also in, on and about the awning, and to thaw, and run down upon said sidewalk in front of said building and freeze and form dangerous conditions and obstructions thereon to pedestrians. . . .

"Plaintiff states that on or about Saturday evening at 9:30 P.M., January 25th, 1930, at a time when many people were passing in front of said J.J. Newberry store, she, the plaintiff, was lawfully using said sidewalk at the place herein described and was passing over said place in company with members of her family and was carrying bundles and articles in her arms, having with her her small child, and was at said time and place proceeding along in a prudent and careful manner, in the exercise of due and proper care on her part, unaware and unwarned of the dangerous condition in and upon said sidewalk when she stepped upon said slippery and dangerous ice and instantly she was caused to slip and fall to the concrete sidewalk with force and violence."

Defendants' separate answers stated a general denial, that the walk was under the exclusive control of the city, and pleaded contributory negligence of plaintiff. The evidence showed that plaintiff, with her husband and five-year-old son, were walking along the sidewalk in front of defendant's store, Saturday night, January 25, 1930; that there were many other people on the streets; that although there was snow and ice in the street the walks were generally clean; and that plaintiff was walking along naturally, looking where she was going and glancing in at defendant's store window when she fell and was injured. She said that after she had fallen she noticed there was a strip of ice two to two and one-half feet wide clear across the walk from the building to the curb. Plaintiff was corroborated by *Page 478 other witnesses as to such strip of ice extending all the way across the sidewalk, which was twelve feet wide. Defendant's store was in the principal business district of Hannibal and the walk was well lighted both by street lights and lights in defendant's windows. The 25th day of January, 1930, was clear, but there was about six inches of snow on the ground from previous snowfalls. There had been heavy snows earlier in January and the temperature had been as as low as seventeen degrees below zero. On the 20th it snowed all day and there was nine and one-half inches of snow on the ground. There was a light snow (about one-half inch) on the 21st. On January 21st, 22nd and 23rd, temperatures below zero were registered. On January 24th the highest was twenty-nine degrees above zero. On January 25th the early morning temperature was fifteen degrees above zero; from ten A.M. to five P.M., it was twenty degrees or more, the highest being twenty-three degrees from two to three P.M.; by nine P.M. the temperature had dropped to ten degrees above zero. There was "a little sift of snow" (.02 inch) that evening.

The box-like hood or casing over the awning extended across the entire front of the building and projected from the building about ten inches. It had no gutter or groove to carry away water from it and its surface was a continuous straight incline away from the building, except for a small depression near the outer edge; it had a fall of one inch; and the drainage from it was directly upon the sidewalk or upon the awning if it was not completely rolled up under it. The awning rolled up on a roller, which was operated by a crank; when completely rolled up, the awning was entirely under the casing.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W.2d 447, 336 Mo. 467, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stith-v-j-j-newberry-co-mo-1935.