96 Mo. 53 | Mo. | 1888
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries in which plaintiff obtained judgment, from which the defendant has appealed.
Por his cause of action plaintiff alleges in his petition that the city of St. Louis is a municipal corporation, and by. virtue of .the laws- of the state owned and controlled the court-house building and grounds bounded, on the north by Chestnut street, on the west by .Fifth street, on the south by Market street, and on the east by Fourth street; that plaintiff, while passing along a. passageway from the court-house entrance, next south of that portion known as court-room number two, endeavoring to go from said entrance to Fifth street, got out of his path and fell into an open area or pit adjacent to-said passageway, and received the injury for which he-sites. It is averred that said pit or area was, by reason of its proximity to said pathway, dangerous to persons while passing to and from said entrance; that it was-unfenced, unguarded and unlighted.
The evidence tended to establish the averments of the petition, and that defendant was injured in the way set forth therein. The evidence also tended to show that the areas or pits into one of which plaintiff fell had been constructed about thirty years ago for the purpose
It is very clear that under our rulings in the cases of Reardon v. St. Louis County, 36 Mo. 555 ; Swineford v. Franklin County, 73 Mo. 279, and Armstrong v. Brunswick, 79 Mo. 319, that if the accident in which plaintiff was hurt had occurred anterior to the separation of the city of St. Louis from the county of St. Louis no action could have been maintained against the county of St. Louis, it being distinctly held in the first case above cited that counties are <7wcm-corporations, made by the legislature for purposes of public policy, and are. not responsible for neglect of duties enjoined upon them, unless the action is given by statute. After an elaborate discussion of a similar question in the cases of Eastman v. Meredith, 36 N. H. 284; Hill v. Boston, 122 Mass. 344, and Board v. Mighel, 7 Ohio St. 109, the same conclusion is arrived at as that announced in the cases' above cited from our own reports.
It follows from what has been said that if the city of St. Louis, after its separation from the county, sustains the same relation to the courthouse as the county did -before the separation, it is no more liable for damages for such an injury as plaintiff sues for than the county would have been. We think it clear that the relation of the city government to the courthouse, is the same as that of the county governments with reference to courthouses in the respective counties in the state ; and that the courthouse is maintained in the city of St. Louis, not in the exercise of or by virtue of its
This view of the subject brings us to the conclusion, that the court erred in refusing the instruction asked by defendant, and for this error the judgment is reversed.