73 Mo. 219 | Mo. | 1880
This was an action 'against the St. Louis Gaslight Company, as owner, and one Barnes, the tenant in possession of a certain building on Pine street, in the city of St. Louis, for negligence in not guarding the entrance to an area or opening in front of said building, and abutting upon the sidewalk, into which it is alleged the plaintiff’s husband fell on the night of January 22nd, 1876, and was thereby killed. /
The building in question is located on the north side
Buesching-, at the time of his death, kept a saloon on Chestnut street between Main and Second streets, two blocks distant from the place of the accident, and lived with his family over his saloon. He was an industrious man, attentive to his business, and tnough in the habit of drinking, was not a drunkard. He was last seen alive by the barber at a shop on Olive street, hear Second, who knew him well, and had been in the habit of shaving him every Saturday night for two years. At 9 o’clock p. m., of January 22nd, which was Saturday, Buesching went to this barbershop and was shaved. He waited until the shop was closed, and asked the barber to take a drink with him, which he declined to do. It does not appear that deceased took a drink, and the testimony is that there were no sa
On the next morning, about seven o’clock, he was found dead at the bottom of the cellar entrance in front of the gas company’s building, lying on his back, with his feet up the steps and his head against the basement door, with his neck broken, and no marks of personal violence on his body. His watch and other valuables were on his person. His pantaloons were unbuttoned for a short distance in front, and there was a urinal in the alley. There was a gas lamp burning that night on the opposite side .of the street, thirty-four feet from the cellar-way in which Buesching was found. He had kept a saloon for six years at the corner of Second and Pine streets, half a block distant from this cellar-way, which had then been there for nearly twenty years. The plaintiff recovered judgment in the circuit court, which was reversed by the court of appeals, the latter court holding that on the facts stated the circuit court should have taken the case from the jury. The plaintiff brings the case here by appeal.
In Jarvis v. Dean, 3 Bing. 447, the plaintiff recovered damages for injuries sustained by falling into an open, unguarded area adjoining the street, and no question was made as to his right of action. Barnes v. Ward, 67 Eng. Com. Law 392, (9 Man.Gran. & S.,) was an action under Lord Campbell’s act, brought by the administrator of Jane Barnes to recover damages for her death, occasioned by the failure of the defendant to properly guard, fence off and rail in a certain hole or area abutting upon the footway, into which while lawfully passing upon said footway she slipped and fell. This case was most elaborately argued, and in consequence of doubts entertained by the court as to the duty of the defendant to fence off the excavation, a second argument was directed, and after the fullest consideration, and an examination of the original nisi prius records in Coupland v. Hardingham and Jarvis v. Dean, as to the location of the areas in question in those cases, the court said : “ It appears to us, after much consideration, that the defend • ant, in having made that excavation, was guilty of a public nuisance, even though the danger consisted in the risk of accidentally deviating from the road.” So, also, in the case of Hadley v. Taylor, Law Rep., 1 C. P. 53, Erle, C. J., said: “The plaintiff seeks compensation for an injury which he has sustained through falling into a hole on the defendants’ premises. The hole was not upon the public highway, but distant from it about fourteen inches. I think, however, the defendants (assuming them to be in possession of the adjoining premises) would be liable for a nuisance to the highway, if the excavation were-so near to it that a person lawfully using the way and using ordinary caution, accidentally slipping, might fall into it.” To the same Effect are Snow v. Provincetown 120 Mass. 580; Bush v. Johnson 23 Pa. St. 209, and Temperance Hall Asso. v.Giles,
It has bee¡) repeatedly decided by this court that it is not incumbent upon the plaintiff, in the first instance, to show that he was free from negligence, or in the exercise of ordinary care at the time of receiving the injury complained of, but that the concurring negligence of the plaintiff is a matter of defense, and the burden of showing it is, therefore, upon the defendant. If, however, it appears, without any conflict of evidence, from the plaintiff’s own case, or from the cross-examination of his witnesses, that he was guilty of negligence proximately contributing to produce the injury, it would be the duty of the court to take the case from the jury, by declaring as a matter of law that the plaintiff cannot recover.
We are thus brought to a consideration of the main question in this case : Has the court of appeals erred in deciding that the circuit court should, on the plaintiff’s own testimony, have declared that the plaintiff could not recover? The point is not without difficulty. Two main facts, however, are clear: Eirst, that the defendants were guilty of negligence in leaving the opening unguarded at its entrance. Second, that the plaintiff’s husband was found on the morning of January 23rd, 1876, lying on his back with his neck broken, his head and shoulders at the bottom of the passage, and his feet and limbs resting on the steps above him, his body free from any marks of personal violence, and his watch and money and other valu
Taking it for granted^ then that Buesching fell into the opening, or what is tantamount thereto, that there is from which that fact could be , .... . . found, the next question is, is there evidence A . on which a jury should be permitted to find that at the time of his fall the deceased was in the exercise of ordinary care. The argument of defendants’ counsel is, that if the deceased saw this entrance, he was negligent in not avoiding it. If he did not see it, he was negligent in not looking, as it was in plain view and well known to him, and had been for years before; that ordinary care and prudence required him to look to his steps, and had he done so, he could not have failed to see it; and therefore, it follows that he came to his death by reason of his own negligence contributing thereto. It does not appear from direct and positive testimony that the deceased knew of the existence of the opening in question — one witness does indeed say “ he knew of the condition of the street, for it had been in the same condition for ten or fifteen years,”
It may be proper, however, to remark in this connection, that the rule which obtains between master and servant’ where there is knowledge on the part of the latter of dangerous defects in tools, apparatus, machinery, structures or grounds, furnished by the master, with which, or in which, as the case may be, the servant is required to work, is inapplica
The argument for the defendants, then, with the element of previous knowledge eliminated, stands thus: As the opening was not concealed, but was obvious A . to the sight, the deceased was guilty of negligence if he did not see it, and if he did see it, he was guilty of negligence in not avoiding it. These propositions are stated as abstract propositions, which must, if true, obtain in all cases, and not in this case only, for the circumstances under which Buesching failed to see the cellar-way, or seeing it, failed to avoid it, are not shown by the testimony. These propositions, then, if they are true, and mean anything as applied to this case, mean that Buesching should, no matter what the circumstances surrounding him at the time, have seen the hole into which he fell, and seeing it, should, no matter how great the difficulty of so doing, have avoided it. If such be the law, it is quite plain that there never could be a recovery for an injury occasioned by an obvious defect in a highway. But such is not the
Now, the law presumes that the deceased was in the exercise of ordinary care; and this presumption is not overthrown by the mere fact of injury, Shearman & Redfield on Neg., § 44; Hoyt v. The City of Hudson 41 Wis. 105, 111; s. c., 22 Am. Rep. 714; Gay v. Winter, 34 Cal. 153. This presumption of due care always obtains in favor of a plaintiff in an action to recover damages for an injury sustained by him through the alleged negligence of another. If it were otherwise, the decisions of this court, which require the defendant to plead and prove as a defense the contributory negligence of the plaintiff or deceased, would be absurd. Slight circumstances, however, in the absence of direct evidence, may overcome the presumption of freedom from negligence which the law indulges. The habits and character of the person injured, his mental and physical condition when last seen before the injury, the location and character of the object or instrumentality causing the injury, and the nature of the injury itself, are all to be taken into consideration by the jury in determining whether he was free from fault when injured.
In the case before us, there is no testimony whatever showing what the conduct of the deceased was when he fell into the opening, and the presumption of law being that he conducted himself with due care, it was for the jury to draw such inferences from the facts in evidence as would overthrow that presumption, and not for the court. Barton v. Railroad Co., 52 Mo, 253; Fernandes v. Sacramento City R. R. Co., 52 Cal. 45; Hoyt v. City of Hudson, 41 Wis. 105, 111; Gay v. Winter, 34 Cal. 153. If it clearly appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff, without any contradiction, that the deceased was, when last seen, so
This being so, it only remains to inquire whether there is any error in the instructions given at the request of the plaintiff. Only one instruction asked by the defendants was refused, and that was properly refused. It does not correctly state the law.. The only instruction given for the plaintiff, which is commented upon adversely by the court of appeals, and indeed the only one about the correctness of which there can be any question, is the third, the first paragraph of which defines ordinary care as follows: “ The court declares the law to be, that ordinary care means that degree of care which may reasonably be expected of a person in the situation of plaintiff’s husband at the time the accident occurred.” It is objected that as there was some testimony from which a jury would be at liberty to infer that the deceased was not entirely sober at the time of the accident, this instruction was calculated to mislead, as what is known to the law as ordinary care is not to be expected of a person not entirely sober. We do not understand the word “ situation ” in this instruction to be used as denoting the physical and mental condition of the deceased, but as referring to his probable surroundings at the time of the accident. Under this instruction, if the jury believed that the deceased was not in a condition of mind or body to exercise that degree of care called for by his “situation” or surroundings, of course they should have found, for the defendants; and we see nothing in the case calculated to prevent them from taking that view of the instruction. The same phraseology is employed in some text books and in some adjudged cases, and it might, under some circumstances, be misunderstood and be calculated to mislead the jury, but as we find no reference whatever in the instruc
It is unnecessary to comment upon the instructions given for the defendants. What we have said will indicate how far we deem them correct. The judgment of the court of appeals will be reversed, and that of the circuit court affirmed.