134 Mo. App. 645 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
The plaintiff’s suit is to recover damages for an injury alleged to have been the result of the defendant’s negligence in the faulty construction and maintenance of one of its sidewalks.
Jefferson street in said city runs east and west and intersects Marion street running north and south. The city, in improving Jefferson street which was sixty feet wide, paved only twenty-four feet with the center six inches higher than the outer edges of the pavement. There was a space on each side of the paved street of twelve feet between the pavement and sidewalks and the sidewalks were each six feet wide. At the intersection of Marion street, the curb makes a quarter-circle to the south and north lines of Jefferson street. Persons passing along Jefferson street, in order to cross Marion street, would have to pass over two of these curbs. When the paving was completed, it left the sidewalk on the south side of Jefferson street about eleven inches lower than the top of the curb. On the same side of the latter street at the intersection of Marion street and west of the west curb, dirt had been placed, making a gradual incline from the top of the curb down to the sidewalk. The evidence differs as to the length of the slope, but it is agreed that it was from three to six feet, and that the fall in the whole distance was eleven and one-fourth incites.
The plaintiff lived in the eastern part of the town and his usual route in going and coming was over this
As to the manner in which he was injured his own evidence must be depended upon solely. He stated that, “It was not really dark and not really light. It was dark twilight;” that he knew when he came to the place and that he raised his foot high enough to go over the curbing. When his foot struck the incline he slipped and fell. There had been snow and rain previously, which had frozen, but had thawed during the day and again become frozen during the evening. The walk, with the exception of the snow, had remained in the same condition for two months before plaintiff's injury. The plaintiff recovered a judgment for $2,500 from which defendant appealed.
The defendant offered a demurrer to the plaintiff’s case on the close of his testimony and one upon the close of all the testimony. It is of the action of- the court in refusing these demurrers that defendant principally complains.
In Wheat v. St. Louis, 179 Mo. 572, it is said, “The negligence charged in the petition is that the city constructed and maintained a manhole to a sewer in the street, which projected three feet above the level of the street, and which was about six feet in circumference, and had earth piled around the manhole, which was nine feet and six inches at the base and sloped towards the top, which is. alleged was a dangerous obstruction.” Held, as to some one traveling in the night time when he could not see the obstruction, if he should run against it and be injured, the city would be liable. “But the city is not liable to a driver of a milk wagon who had for a year daily passed the manhole, knew all about it, could see it, and by the exercise of ordinary care could have
Instructions one, two and three, given for plaintiff, are criticised by defendant, but we think without just cause. And. we think the judgment, under the evidence, was not excessive. Finding no error in the case, the same is affirmed.