Cohn v. City of Kansas

108 Mo. 387 | Mo. | 1891

Black, J.

Lena Cohn and her husband brought this. suit against the City of Kansas and the Grand Avenue Railway Company to recover damages for injuries which she received from falling into an excavation in a street, made by .the railway company under authority from the city. The important averment of the petition is that both defendants negligently permitted the excavation to remain in the street without guardrails to protect persons from falling into it. The defendant dismissed as to the railway company, and the plaintiff took a change of venue to Buchanan' county, where there -was a verdict and j udgment for plaintiff against the city.

At the time of the accident the railroad company had made an excavation, on Grand avenue, a street in the city of Kansas, for the purpose of placing therein the machinery to connect the 'street cable road with, the engine house. The excavation was some thirty or thirty-five feet wide and extended out from the west side of the street to the middle thereof, a distance of some fifty feet. There was a space of one or two feet between the end of the excavation at the middle of the street and a street railroad track. There was no barrier or other protection at this end of the excavation. There was room on the east side of the street for wagons to pass, and the east sidewalk was wide and entirely free from obstruction, and this was known to the plaintiff; for she passed south on that sidewalk shortly *391before the accident. On ber return she came north on the west sidewalk. She says that sidewalk was all torn np at the excavation; that she went around the hole where the men were digging in the ground; that “the car came, then a loaded wagon and a buggy, and they were so crowded that I was pushed in; that was the way I was pushed in ; I had no place to catch hold of, and there was. no fence or nothing and I was thrown down between the wagon and the buggy, and they pushed me in.” Again she says: “I saw lots of people passing by and so I passed by;” that she followed the hole around.

On the part of the defendant the evidence is to the effect that the west sidewalk was barricaded; that persons going on that sidewalk passed over the street to the east sidewalk when they came to the excavation ; that the plaintiff started' around, and on her way asked one of the laborers if she coul'd go “by there,” and he said “no,” to cross over to the east sidewalk; that she went ahead, and the man called to her saying the paving blocks were loose and she might fall; that she went on around the east end of the excavation between that and the street-car tracks ; that a man with a long plank on his shoulder was going’ south, followed by a wagon; that this man saw her and told her to go back but she did not obey him ; that the wagon struck the plank and threw the man, the plaintiff and the plank into the hole near the northeast corner thereof where it was seven or eight feet deep ; that there were a number of men at work in the excavation loading a wagon ; that barriers or lights were placed around the hole at night, but were removed in the daytime to enable the men to work, and that there was no temporary sidewalk around the excavation. Several eye witnesses testified to the foregoing facts on the part of the defendant.

The plaintiff in rebuttal testified that she did not have the alleged conversation with the laborer, that she did not hear anyone call to her, and that she did not see a man with a plank on his shoulder.

*392Back of the assigned errors in excluding certain depositions of physicians, offered in evidence by the defendant to show the nature and the extent of the injuries, is the question whether the evidence is sufficient to support any verdict in favor of the plaintiff. In considering this question we must lay out of sight the controverting evidence of the defendant. We must also assume that the evidence produced by plaintiff is true, and give to it every inference favorable to her which may be reasonably and fairly drawn therefrom.

A person is not bound to abandon the use of a high-, way, open to the public, for the simple reason that it is known to him to be out of repair or in a defective condition. ' The duty is, however, imposed upon the traveler to use ordinary care to avoid the defect, and knowledge on her part that the street is out of repair is a circumstance to go to the jury in determining the question whether he did'use such care. As a general rule such knowledge does not in and of itself constitute want of due care. In other words, knowledge of the defect is not conclusive evidence of negligence on the part of the traveler. Smith v. St. Joseph, 45 Mo. 449; Loewer v. Sedalia, 77 Mo. 431; 2 Shear. & Red. on Neg. [4 Ed.] sec. 376.

Two things must concur to entitle the plaintiff to recover in this class of cases. And, first, there must be a defect in the road by the fault of the defendant; second, there must be no want of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff to avoid it. The court, in the instructions given at the request of the plaintiff, told the jury that the fact that plaintiff knew the condition of the street would not prevent a recovery, “ if she used such care in attempting to pass along said street as persons ordinarily use under such circumstances.” And in another instruction, given at the instance of the. plaintiff, the court said, “ordinary care is just such care as a person should ordinarily exercise under like circumstances.” The court erred in both of these *393definitions ; for ordinary care is that care which a prudent person ordinarily uses under like circumstances, which is another and a different thing from such care as persons ordinarily use- under like circumstances.

While in general it is for the jury to say whether the plaintiff used ordinary care, and this question they ■are to determine from all the circumstances, still it often occurs that the court may declare the plaintiff wanting in due care on given facts. One who attempts to cross •over a sidewalk as part of a road, known to him to be dangerous, when the dangerous place could have been •easily avoided, as by passing around it, or taking .another side of the road, is wanting in due care, and the court may so say as a matter of law. Erie v. Magill, 101 Pa. St. 616; Gosport v. Evans, 112 Ind. 133; Centralia v. Krouse, 64 Ill. 19.

. In this case no want of care can be attached to the ■city from the mere fact of the existence of the excavation, for the city had the right to permit it to be made ; and the work was progressing with proper haste. The only possible act of negligence on the part of the city is the failure to have railings along the end of the excavation at the middle of the street. Such a railing was not necessary to give the plaintiff warning of the existence of the excavation, for she saw it, and,'therefore, had full notice of its existence. But it is said there ¡should have been a railing there to prevent persons from falling over. The answer to this is that it was not ¡a fit or proper place for persons to travel on foot. The place between the excavation and the street-car rail was but one or two feet wide, so that cars and persons on foot could not pass at the same time. To have placed railings and a foot path at such a place would have been to invite persons into danger.

But, aside from all this, the plaintiff’s own evidence ¡shows that the accident occurred in broad daylight. The plaintiff found the west sidewalk barricaded, saw this excavation and men at work in it. She passed *394along the south side of it to the middle of the street,, and, instead of passing on to the east sidewalk which she knew was unobstructed and perfectly safe, she attempted to pass along the narrow space between the-excavation and the street railroad track. Two ways were open to her: One from the middle of the street across to the east sidewalk, which was perfectly safe; the other along the excavation and railroad track in the middle of the street which was obviously unsafe and dangerous. She knowingly chose the latter, and in doing so she took upon herself the hazards attending the experiment. On well-settled principles of law, she has no just cause of action against the city, and this is-, manifest from her own evidence.

The judgment is, therefore, reversed.

All concur.
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