Walker v. Niemeyer

386 S.W.2d 87, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 903
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 11, 1965
DocketNo. 50431
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 386 S.W.2d 87 (Walker v. Niemeyer) 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
Walker v. Niemeyer, 386 S.W.2d 87, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 903 (Mo. 1965).

Opinion

DALTON, Judge.

Action for $25,000 damages for personal' injuries alleged to have been sustained by-plaintiff when she fell on the steps of a. building (a former residence) owned by-defendants, which building had been divided', into four apartments, two on the first floor and two on the second. Plaintiff was a. tenant of one of the second-floor apartments- and was using a stairway provided by defendants for the use of the second-floor tenants at the time she fell. Verdict and judgment were for defendants, but the Court granted plaintiff a new trial on the ground that “defendants’ instructions D-4, D-5,, D-6 and D-l 1 are erroneous and misdirected the Jury because each of them fail to contain a proper and sufficient factual hy-pothesization of the evidentiary facts.”

[89]*89Defendants have appealed and, as appellants, here contend that the Court erred in ■refusing to direct a verdict for defendants at the close of all the evidence, as requested by defendants, (1) because plaintiff failed to make a case for the jury on plaintiff’s claim; and (2) because plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

In considering the issues presented, a statement of the evidence most favorable to plaintiff is required. We shall disregard defendants’ evidence unless it aids plaintiff’s case. Neal v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 353 Mo. 779, 184 S.W.2d 441, 442 [1,2]. Our statement shall also include the evidence most favorable to plaintiff on the issue of whether she was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Goldbaum v. James Mulligan Printing & Publishing Co., 347 Mo. 844, 149 S.W.2d 348, 351 [2],

As stated, plaintiff was a tenant of defendants and was occupying one of the mentioned second-floor apartments. She was seventy-two years of age and had moved into the building on April 25, 1960, only a few days prior to sustaining her injuries, on April 29, 1960.

One of the defendants testified that she .and her husband owned the property and had reserved the use of the stairway for their tenants. She also testified that she kept the steps clean and looked after the stairway. The record does not show how long the defendants had owned this apartment but the other defendant testified that he had last varnished the steps approximately two years prior to plaintiff’s fall.

Access to the second-floor apartments was ordinarily gained through an outside door on the north side of the building, although there was also a back stairway. The outside door on the north side of the building opened into a vestibule about four feet square and the mentioned stairway led up to the right or to the west to a landing which was about the same size as the vestibule. There were three steps from the vestibule floor to this landing from which the stairway led up to the left some eleven steps to a second landing, where there was an outside window. The stairway then went up to the left or east four steps to the second-floor hallway. The outside window threw some light on the second landing, but none on the lower steps.

There was a light cord hanging from the ceiling of the second landing, with the light bulb (60 watt) about nine feet nine inches above the floor of the second landing (fifteen and one-half feet above the first landing), “just a drop cord with an ordinary light bulb in it.” There was also a light fixture located on the north wall of the vestibule above the first and second steps, which fixture was seven feet eight inches from the vestibule floor. The light above the second landing was operated by a switch located to the right or west side of the vestibule door and also by a switch located in the second-floor hall. The light fixture above the first steps from the vestibule was operated only by a switch to the right of the outside door. The same switch operated a porch light outside the north entrance door. There was a Venetian blind and some drapes covering the glass portion of this outside door. On the left side of the mentioned stairway going up, there was a bannister all the way to the second floor, while on the right side of the stairs was the outside wall of the building.

There was testimony that even with the upper light on at the head of the stairway it threw no light, or very little, on the bottom three steps because the light was actually behind a wall and, as stated, this upper light was some fifteen feet above the first landing. Other testimony tended to show that the nose or under-cut area of the bottom three steps varied; and that the steps were of wood, worn, stained dark, varnished and waxed.

A witness for plaintiff measured the rise of each of the three steps between the vestibule and the first landing and determined [90]*90that the rise of the first step was six and one-half inches; the second, five and five-eighths inches; the third, five and thirteen-sixteenths inches and the last rise to the first landing was five and five-sixteenths inches. He also found that there was a slight variation in the width of the treads, the tread on the first step being nine and a quarter inches; the second, nine and seven-sixteenths inches and the third, nine and five-sixteenths inches. This same witness stated that at the time he examined these steps on February 21, 1963, at 4:30 in the afternoon of a clear, cold day he found wax on the steps which he could remove with his fingernail; the yellow material he so obtained was wax and not varnish, which1 you would have had to scrape off. No objection was made to this testimony although defendants claimed to have sold the property prior to the mentioned date. “The nosing [on the mentioned three steps] was five-eighths of an inch, one-quarter of an inch, and three-quarters of an inch [respectively], a variation of one-half inch.” The nosing on these steps was “worn and well varnished and waxed.”

Concerning these three steps, plaintiff testified: “They are rather narrow steps” and “they are worn until they are round on the edge.” She also testified that the steps were waxed and had a nice gloss. At the time she fell she was wearing dress oxford shoes with an inch1 and a half heel, not a spike heel.

Neither the owners of the apartment nor anyone else had instructed plaintiff with reference to the operation or use of the front stairway lights. Plaintiff had been using the rear stairway and had been up and down the north stairway no more than twice prior to her fall. On that date she left her apartment and went to the grocery store where she obtained two sacks of groceries and, after parking her automobile, she carried the two sacks of groceries into the north vestibule of the house. She placed one of the sacks on the second step up from the vestibule floor and carried the other sack .up the stairs to her apartment.

When she was at the grocery store a light mist was falling so that the walks were damp or wet and, when she returned home and entered the house, she did not wipe her shoes off on the rug on the vestibule floor, but came in over it. She did not attempt to turn on either of the light switches located to the right of the door, although she had seen and observed the location of the switches. There was enough light from the window so she could see to go up the steps. When she reached her apartment she walked through the living room of her apartment and back to the kitchen, where-she placed the groceries on a table and started back for the rest of the groceries.

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Bluebook (online)
386 S.W.2d 87, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-niemeyer-mo-1965.