78 Mo. App. 67 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
The defendant is the owner of a store building and the lot on which it is situated fronting on Main street in the city of Memphis, Missouri; the building has a cellar or basement, to reach which from the sidewalk in front the defendant excavated an area in the sidewalk four feet wide and six or eight feet long extending from an opening in the cellar wall to within eighteen to twenty-four inches of the outer edge of the sidewalk; this area he bricked up on the sides and outer end; on this brick wall he placed a frame, and on the sill over the opening in the cellar he nailed a 2x8 piece of timber, and on the center of the end pieces he laid a piece of timber extending from one to the other; he covered this opening with a wooden door, divided into four sections, and laid on a level with the sidewalk, which was of plank. On the fourth of July, 1895, Mrs. Amanda J. Lawrence, with five or six other ladies, was ■standing on this cellar door, when a part of the supporting
Defendant was notified by the city of the pendency, nature and object of the Lawrence suit; he was a witness for the city on the trial of the cause, employed private-counsel to assist the city attorney in the defense of the suit, and counseled with the attorneys for the defense. He is -so affected with notice of the Lawrence suit that according to all the authorities, he is concluded by the judgment in that case, if answerable over to the city. Garrison v. Babbage Trans. Co., 94 Mo. 130; State ex rel. v. Barker, 26 Mo. App. 487. And the fact that he was mayor of the city at the time the cause was tried, does not change nor release his-personal relation to that litigation. On March 9, 1895, the defendant executed the following lease to W. H. Busey and John A. Hughes:
“Memphis, Mo., March 9th, 1895.
“I hereby lease the north 20 feet of my store building on the west side of the square in Memphis, Mo., to Busey & Hughes, a firm composed of William H. Busey and John A. Hughes, or to either of them, from this date until the 1st day of October, 1896, said premises to be used by them as a grocery store, at a rental of $25 per month, said rent being-due and payable on the first day of each and every month. The said Busey & Hughes to have the privilege of subleasing said premises to any other party or parties agreeable and acceptable to me, to be used by them as a grocery. Said Busey & Hughes agree to give me 60 days written notice*71 of their intention of vacating said premises before vacating said premises.
“(Seal.) “Henry A. Miller.
“We agree to accept the provisions of the above.
“(Signed in duplicate.) (Seal.) W. H. Busey,
“John A. Hughes.”
At the date of this contract Busey & Hughes were in the possession of the premises and were continuously in the possession thereof as tenants of defendant up to and including the day on which the accident occurred and were using the outside cellar door in connection with the premises. The defendant offered evidence tending to show that the construction of the door and its supports were of good material; that the work was done in a workmanlike manner, and the door was safe for pedestrians to pass over, and that it was in this safe condition when he leased it to Busey & Hughes. On the day of the accident the evidence tended to show that a part of the framework or supports of the •door was rotten and had broken in two, letting the door above and the person standing thereon fall into the area below. The door was put down' in 1890; there was no evidence that it had been substantially repaired at any time after its construction. Defendant on the trial asked a great number of instructions on the theory that, if the original construction of the door was substantial and safe .and that the door and its supports were in a safe condition when he leased to Busey & Hughes, then he was not liable; that it was the duty of Busey & Hughes to keep the door in a safe condition as defendant’s tenants, and they alone were liable over to.the city. The court refused these instructions and instructed the jury to the effect that it was the duty of the defendant to make the repairs necessary to keep the doors in a reasonably safe condition. Defendant assigns this ruling as error, and contends that the excavation was not a nuisance per se, and that as he had not
Our conclusion is that the learned circuit judge correctly instructed the jury, and that he did not err in refusing instructions offered by the defendant. The judgment is affirmed. Judge Bond concurs; Judge Biggs, dissents.