Woods v. Gould

515 S.W.2d 592, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 806
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1968
DocketNo. 24776
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 515 S.W.2d 592 (Woods v. Gould) 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
Woods v. Gould, 515 S.W.2d 592, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 806 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

HOWARD, Presiding Judge.

This suit was brought by appellant through her father as next friend for damages resulting from falling from a second story porch. A jury trial resulted in a judgment for appellant in the amount of $10,000.00. The trial court, on motion, set this judgment aside and entered judgment for respondent in accordance with her motion for directed verdict. We shall refer to the parties as they appeared below.

Plaintiff was approximately two years old at the time she fell from the porch. Her parents had rented a second floor apartment from defendant a little more than a month before the fall. This apartment was in a three story building which contained two apartments on each floor plus a janitor’s quarters in the basement. Plaintiff fell on July 11, 1965. It was a warm, sunny day. Her father had left the apartment sometime before and was working on his car in the alley behind the apartment house. Shortly prior to the fall, plaintiff’s older sister left the apartment and went down to the alley where her father was. Plaintiff’s mother was in the living room sweeping. She last saw plaintiff playing in the bedroom. She did not know that plaintiff had left the apartment. Plaintiff’s father had just got out from under his car when he heard the older girl screaming and calling plaintiff’s name and found plaintiff lying in the concrete alley immediately below the back porch of the apartment building. A woman in a neighboring apartment building was on her back porch and looking along the back of the buildings and saw plaintiff fall through or over the rail of the second floor porch. There was no direct evidence as to how plaintiff got out of the apartment or exactly how she fell.

A photograph of the back of the apartment building shows a back porch common to the two apartments on each of the three floors of the apartment building with stairways running up and down through the porches. The railing consists of three 2x4 boards running horizontally. From the exhibits introduced in evidence, it appears that the 2x4 board forming the bottom rail is approximately four inches from the floor. There is a space of approximately 8Yi or 9 inches between the bottom 2x4 and the middle 2x4 and a space of approximately 12 inches between the middle 2x4 and the 2x4 forming the top rail of the bannister. This top rail is approximately 34 inches high.

Plaintiff’s parents testified that when they rented the apartment, the screen door leading from the apartment to the porch was in need of repair. The screen at the bottom was torn or pushed loose and the latch on the screen door did not hold, so that the door could be pushed open even when it was supposed to be latched. There was also a wooden door leading from the apartment to the back porch. The father testified that he closed the wooden door behind him and that it latched. Plaintiff’s older sister was approximately five years old at the time of the trial. She did not testify and there is no evidence as to how she left the doors when she left the apartment and went downstairs. Likewise, there is no evidence as to whether plaintiff pushed the screen door open or crawled through the defective screen. Plaintiff alleged and [594]*594submitted negligence on the part of defendant in two respects: (1) Failure to repair the screen door as promised, and (2) failure to maintain the common porch in a reasonably safe condition for children such as plaintiff.

As to the screen door, plaintiff contends that the promise of the landlord to repair created a duty to repair, the negligent breach of which gives rise to a cause of action in tort. In support of this contention plaintiff relies on Green v. Kahn, Mo., 391 S.W.2d 269, and Tucker v. Taksel, Mo.App., 345 S.W.2d 385. In Green v. Kahn, the landlord supplied a gas cooking stove for the purpose of cooking and heating the apartment. On a cold night the stove was left burning with an open flame 3 to inches high. Plaintiff’s mother had hung some bed clothes on a line over the stove. During the night a fire started in which the mother was killed and plaintiff was injured. The court found that the gas stove, the pipes leading to it, etc., remained under the control of the landlord and that the negligence in furnishing and maintaining such an open flame stove for heating was one cause of plaintiff’s injuries and that she could recover from the landlord. In Tucker v. Taksel, the young son of the tenant fell out of an apartment window when he braced himself against the window sill which gave way falling out into the yard. In this case, the landlord had retained a key to the apartment for the purpose of making repairs as needed. The court stated that when the defendant, as part of the leasing agreement, promised to make repairs, retained a key for access to the apartment for that purpose and did make repairs but negligently failed to repair the defective window sill, that this amounted to a keeping of such control as to impose the duty by the landlord to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition and that a negligent failure to perform needed repairs gave rise to a cause of action in tort.

Since the case at bar was submitted, the Supreme Court of Missouri in Lemm v. Gould, 425 S.W.2d 190 (January 8, 1968) has decided a case involving much the same contention. In that case, the young son of the tenant fell from a fourth floor porch by squeezing between a corner post and a baluster in the porch railing. Some nine years before the date of the fall, the porch had been remodeled and the round corner post had been boxed in to make it square. In doing so, one baluster was removed and not replaced. This increased the maximum distance between the post and baluster from 5 to 7 inches. Liability was predicated on the promise of defendant to repair plus retention of the control of the leased premises for purposes of making repairs. This porch was not a common porch but was solely appurtenant to the apartment in which plaintiff lived, In considering this matter, the Supreme Court said:

“Plaintiffs seek to recover under the rule that ‘a landlord is under a duty to exercise ordinary care to keep the portions of the premises which he retains in his control in a reasonably safe condition for the use intended and is liable for damages for personal injuries resulting from his failure to perform that duty.’ Peterson v. Brune, Mo.Sup., 273 S.W.2d 278, 280 [1], Plaintiffs’ theory is that defendants retained control of the porch for the purpose of making repairs in order to make it safe for the Lemm children to play on, and therefore defendants were duty bound to make the porch reasonably safe for the use of Michael.
“The possession or control which must be shown in order to make a landlord liable under this rule is not to be found merely in the obligation of the landlord to make repairs or the right to enter the premises. Lahtinen v. Continental Bldg. Co., 339 Mo. 438, 97 S.W.2d 102, 106 [3], There must be something more — some additional fact or facts from which a jury could infer that under the agreement the tenant gave up and surrendered his right to exclusive possession and control and yielded to the landlord some degree or measure of control and dominion over [595]

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Bluebook (online)
515 S.W.2d 592, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-gould-moctapp-1968.