Swails v. City of Caruthersville

138 S.W. 948, 158 Mo. App. 589, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 505
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 S.W. 948 (Swails v. City of Caruthersville) 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
Swails v. City of Caruthersville, 138 S.W. 948, 158 Mo. App. 589, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 505 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

REYNOLDS, P. J.

The petition in this case charges that while plaintiff was walking along the sidewalk on a public street in the city of Caruthersville, he was tripped and his left foot wrenched and broken by reason of one of the planks or boards of the sidewalk not being nailed down, but being loose and liable to bet easily displaced. Charging that it was negligence and carelessness on the part of the city to permit the walk at that point to be and remain in an unreasonably safe condition for travel and that the city authorities knew or by the exercise of due care could [592]*592have known of the dangerous condition of the walk, he asks damages for the sum of $2000.

The answer, admitting incorporation but denying the other allegations of the petition, pleads negligence on the part of plaintiff, directly contributing to the injury.

A general denial of this was interposed by reply.

There was a trial before the court and a jury. At the beginning of the introduction of testimony on the part of plaintiff, defendant objected to the introduction of any testimony for the reason that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This was overruled and plaintiff excepted.

As a witness in his own behalf plaintiff testified that he lived at the town of Hayti and was in Caru-thersville on the night of the 21st of January, 1909, intending to take a train for his home which was due to pass Caruthersville sometime between 11 and 12 o’clock that night. He walked down the sidewalk of Charles street, on which the. railroad station is situated. The train was late that night and as he was going along the sidewalk of. that street, walking as fast as he could, he came to where there was a loose plank in the sidewalk, over and on top of which another plank had been put. This was directly in front of a saloon or restaurant. The plank of the sidewalk was thin and another plank had been put on top of it. The under plank had got off of the sill or «runner and got kicked in under the top plank, so that it “popped up,” as he said, or raised above the surface of the other planks. As plaintiff made a quick step he shoved his foot in under this plank, his foot caught and he was thrown forward and fractured his foot. These planks were not nailed down and the end of one had been burned off. Plaintiff did not think there was any light there at that time; did not see the plank and its condition; was not paying any attention to it. The first [593]*593knowledge he had that the planks were loose was when he threw his foot in and fell. There was no light up and down the street. It was a dark night and all the light that was shining there was out of the saloon building, which was' directly opposite this place in the sidewalk the light shining out of the front windows of the saloon. He fell with his full force and could not catch himself and was crippled and still has to walk with a stick. The injury was across the left foot, which was the one he ran under the plank. Plaintiff was helped on the train when it came along and off again when the train reached his home, when he got some crutches and went to his house. Plaintiff suffered great pain; his foot was black and swollen, the discoloration extending to his ankle; was confined to the house about two weeks and then got on crutches; bad a couple of physicians attending him and used his crutches until some time in April; his foot pained him from that time on and still pains him occasionally; lost a month and a half’s time from his business and incurred bills for the surgeons amounting to something like fifteen dollars. On cross-examination he stated that he was walking as fast as he could when he got hurt; at that time and since he was six months old he was compelled to walk with the side of bis foot rather to the front; when he was six months old h¿ received an injury to his hip. Plaintiff was walking fast when he got hurt, in a hurry to catch the train. There was a street light in the vicinity but plaintiff did not think it was burning, although he would not be positive. He had come to Caruthersville that evening about four o’clock and gone over this same walk; at that time there was a loose plank along there; could not say whether it was at this same place exactly but right along there, and to bis best judgment thought the loose plank was at the same place where he fell that night. Asked why he was not looking out for this loose plank and [594]*594why he did not see it when he went, back over it, plaintiff said he was walking along, “just like you walking along and not expecting the plank to be out of place.” At four o’clock that same day he had seen the loose plank lying there; it was lying upon this place and was loose; thought he- stepped on it and it was all right. Asked if this plank had -entirely covered the hole through which he had stepped at night, he said it “lacked an inch or two.” The hole, however, was not big enough for him to run his foot through. After he was hurt he turned around to see what had hurt him and he saw the planks there. He had been looking when he was walking along and he looked after he got up; he might have seen the hole; could have seen it. When he was walking along that night he was walking with his head up. Plaintiff had seen the loose plank on the sidewalk at four o’clock when he walked over it and knows it was somewhere along there. At night when he fell over the plank he “wasn’t paying any attention to the walk.” When he got up after his fall both the planks were on his foot and he looked back and saw the hole; does not know what kicked the plank out of there; had come to town and walked over the sidewalk every two or three days; was familiar with, it and its condition; had been going over it ever since it was built. On redirect examination he repeated that he was familiar with the walk and knew its dangerous condition; When he passed over the sidewalk at four o’clock that evening the planks were not in the shape they were in at night; not in the condition they were in that evening; meaning, as we understand it, that when he went over it at four o’clock that afternoon and long before that, while they were liable to be put in the condition in which they were at night by pedestrians passing over them, they were not tilted, one end up. On recross-examination plaintiff stated that he had passed over the walk at four o’clock and saw the loose plank as he came over it and that it was [595]*595liable to be misplaced; that when he came back over it at night he did not make any examination to see whether the plank had been misplaced or not. This was practically the testimony of plaintiff in direct, cross, redirect and recross-examination. He also testified to having pointed out the place where he fell to two or more of his witnesses.

Witnesses produced on part of plaintiff testified to their knowledge of the condition of the sidewalk in front of the restaurant or saloon; that it was in bad condition about the place where plaintiff was supposed to have been hurt; the plank was loose and had been that way for some time, possibly two weeks. There was a hole in the walk that “the boys chopped out to get out a dime.”

There was also testimony that the city officials had frequently walked over the sidewalk and that any of them walking over it could see the condition in which it was if they had gone there to inspect it; “they did see it,” said one of the witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 948, 158 Mo. App. 589, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swails-v-city-of-caruthersville-moctapp-1911.