170 Mo. App. 376 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Respondent, a lady fifty-six years of age while walking down the west side of Eleventh street in the city of St. Joseph about 1:30 p. m., was injured by a fall caused by stumbling over a stump of a tree in the sidewalk about a foot and a half or two feet inside the curb and extending three or four inches above the surface of the walk. The sidewalk
Penn street, running east and west, crossed Eleventh street a short distance north of where • the stump was. A street car came along Penn street making a great noise and rapidly nearing the crossing at Eleventh street. At the same moment a team coming south on Eleventh street was also approaching this crossing and “cutting up like it was going to run away.” Respondent was looking where she was going, but seeing the team was frightened and likely to run away and in her direction, her attention wás momentarily attracted to it. Just then her toe struck the stump and she was thrown to the ground sustaining the injuries complained of.
The questions of the negligence of the city and of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff were properly submitted to the jury, and it decided the city was negligent and not plaintiff, and returned a verdict in her favor of $500. Thereupon defendant applied to the trial court, in a motion for new trial, to have the verdict set aside on the ground, among others, that the plaintiff can in no event recover because she was guilty of contributory negligence and because the existence of the stump in the sidewalk was not such a defect as to render the city liable in damages. Receiving an adverse ruling from the trial judge on these points, the case is brought to us.
The case will have to be affirmed. It is not contributory negligence as a matter of law for a pedestrian to trip against an obstruction even though it is in sight, unless it was so obvious as that it could not 'possibly fail to escape notice if one were using the ordinary senses. [O’Donnell v. Hannibal, 144 Mo. App. 155.] The question of plaintiff’s negligence is
Permitting a stump, five or six inches in diameter' and extending three or four inches above the surface of the sidewalk, to remain there five months is sufficient to authorize the submission to the jury of the questions whether the walk is dangerous or unsafe to pedestrians, and whether the city was negligent in so doing. [Hill v. St. Joseph, 143 Mo. App. 389; O’Don