113 Mo. 144 | Mo. | 1892
This is an action for damages for personal injuries, in which the jury found for the defendant, and from the judgment in his favor on such, verdict the plaintiff appeals.
The substance of the petition is: That the defendant is the owner and proprietor of the Laclede hotel, on the corner of Sixth and Chestnut streets, in the city of St. Louis; that said building is bounded on the
The answer was a general denial, and a plea of contributory negligence, upon which issue was joined by reply.
The errors insisted on here are, that the court admitted improper evidence, refused an instruction asked by the plaintiff, and gave the following instructions on its own motion and at the request of the defendant, which are claimed to be erroneous:
“1. If the jury believe from the evidence, that the defendant was the owner and in possession of the building and premises known' as the Laclede Hotel, in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, on the morning of the fifth day of February, 1889, and that on the south side of said hotel there was at said time a public alley; that in said alley or immediately adjoining the same, an opening about ten or twelve feet in depth, about three feet in width, and about twenty feet in length, joins said hotel*147 and is a part thereof, then the law devolves npon the defendant the dnty so to guard and protect said opening as to render it secure for persons lawfully using said alley; and if the jury further find from the evidence that plaintiff, on or about the fifth day of February, 1889, while lawfully being in or passing through' said alley, and without negligence on his part fell into said opening on the west end or west side thereof, by reason of the neglect of the defendant to provide a proper railing, or to sufficiently guard and protect said opening, and that he (G-oltz) was injured thereby, then the jury will find for the plaintiff; unless you further find from the evidence that a suitable railing or guard had been placed around said opening and that said guard or railing had been removed without the knowledge or consent of defendant, and that by the exercise of ordinary care the defendant would not have known of such removal.
“2. If you believe from the evidence that the injuries complained of were occasioned by the carelessness or negligence of the plaintiff, which directly contributed to the 'accident, your verdict ought to • be for the defendant, whether the place into which the plaintiff fell was securely guarded or not.
“3. If the plaintiff was thrown into the area or fell in through his own carelessness or negligence, he cannot recover in this case, and your verdict should be for the defendant.
“4. The pursuit of his hat was not such an ■emergency as exempted the plaintiff from the exercise of reasonable care and prudence when he entered the alley in question, and if you find from the evidence that plaintiff, without exercising ordinary care and prudence, rushed or ran into the alley, knowing it to be dark, and not knowing the dangers involved, and whilst so rushing or running he fell into the area in*148 question, lie cannot recover in this case, and your verdict should be for the defendant.
“5. If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff in the night time ran or went with great haste in the alley in question, and at the time the alley was dark and he was unable to see his way, and he did not know of the dangers or risk involved, and if he was a stranger in the place and could not discover or discern the condition of the alley, and while running through the alley and without exercising ordinary care and prudence, and while running through the alley, fell into the opening referred to by the witness, then he was guilty of such contributory negligence as precludes his right to recover in this case, and the jury will so find.”
On the trial Henry Yoidt testified for the plaintiff in substance as follows: “I am a tailor, am an adopted son of the plaintiff, have had a home with him for the last nine or ten years. Last February, at the time’ of the accident befalling the plaintiff, I went to look at the place of the accident. This was in the afternoon of the same morning he was found in the opening. I went into th'e alley from Market street, between Fifth and Sixth streets. The alley makes an angle. It comes in at Market street and comes out on Sixth street; when I got there I found a man fixing the railing, he was a blacksmith, I think; the railing is a little longer than this (referring to the jury railing), about as high as this, and at one end it runs into the house; the man was fixing the corner post, and putting an iron bar into the bottom, and he was fastening it to the post. The railing is of iron, posts and cross pieces; on the edge where it was being repaired there were no cross pieces; the man was fixing the'west end, from the iron post to the wall of the hotel, a space of about three or four feet, I think.”
“Q. Describe that part of the railing at the western end of area (defendant’s counsel objects to the question).
“The Court: This was after the accident?
“Mr. Laughlin: Yes, sir.
“The Court: The objection is sustained. (Plaintiff’s counsel excepts to the ruling of the court.)”
“There was one crossbar at the bottom; at the time I saw it, the man was working at the top bar, there was nothing between that bar and the cross bar at the bottom; the space between them was large enough for anybody to slip or fall through; I speak of the west side of the railing; the south side of the railing had cross bars between the posts; it is about three and one half to four feet high.”
On cross-examination, he testified: “I am plaintiff’s adopted son, lived with him, was hunting for him the next morning, went to the police station on Chestnut street, and asked them whether they had found this man; saw the sergeant in charge.
“Q. Did you tell the sergeant there, that your stepfather had gone on a spree with some people from the old country the night before and had not returned? A. I did not tell him. Here plaintiff’s counsel objects to the question as immaterial and incompetent.
“Q. Was it a fact that your stepfather did go off on a spree with some friends from the old country the night before? A. No, sir.
“ Q. Did you tell the sergeant that he had. A. No,' sir.”
Plaintiff’s counsel objected to the question.
“The Court: Before you objected, he answered the question.
*150 “Mr. G-ottschalk: I ask that the answer be stricken from the record. On inquiry by the court, defendant’s counsel states, the witness has made certain statements and he wants to find out whether he has made different statements; whereupon the court overrules the objection, to which ruling plaintiff, at the time, duly excepts.”
Eor the defendant John H. Wray was introduced as a witness and testified as follows: “I am sergeant of police; remember the occurrence of this man’s fall; he was brought to our station. Next day this gentleman (referring to Mr. Voidt) came to the station and inquired for- him.
“Q. G-o on and tell what was said.”
Plaintiff’s counsel objects to the question as calling for a conversation in the absence of the plaintiff. Objection overruled. Plaintiff excepts.
“He came and was making inquiry about this man (plaintiff) and he represented that this man was his guardian or father or something; he was a particular friend at any rate and lived with him or something of that kind, as well as I remember, and he said he was out the night previous, I think it was, to a meeting of some tailors, to a lodge, I think is what he said to me, and after the meeting he and some friends had gone off together to a saloon and had a good time, and had got under the influence of liquor, and they bade him goodbye about Sixth and Market streets, that they insisted on taking him home and he said he was able to take care of himself and would not let them do it, and they then bade him good-bye, and that was the last they saw of him and they didn’t know what became of him. * * * He said this was what the friend who was with the plaintiff told him.”
I. It is insisted that the court committed error in admitting the evidence of the witness Wray, and with
In the face of this situation the counsel for the defendant adroitly put the question to this young and inexperienced witness, “Was it a fact that your stepfather did go off on a spree with some friends from the old country the night before?” To which he promptly answers, “No, sir.” Such answer being of course nothing more than his then opinion upon that subject from what he had heard from others, and about which he personally knew and testified nothing. Andwhen counsel quickly follows with the question: “Did you tell the sergeant that he had?” It is not surprising that he immediately answered, “No, sir,” perhaps indignant that any one should think for a moment that he entertained such an opinion, or had expressed it to another. And so it turns out when the officer is examined. He did not express to him such an opinion, or undertake to tell him anything about the matter, save what he had heard from others. There was here no evidence to be impeached, and none impeaching it. But this semblance of impeachment was made the means of getting before the jury as some sort of evidence the vague rumors that may have come to the
II. Instruction number 1, given by the court, contains the substance of plaintiff’s refused instruction qualified by the last clause, to-wit: ‘ ‘Unless you further find from the evidence that a suitable railing or guard had been placed around said opening and that said guard or railing had been removed without the knowledge or consent of defendant, and that by the exercise of ordinary care the defendant would have known of such removal,” and of this qualification the plaintiff complains principally for the reason that there is no evidence upon which to base it.
The evidence for the plaintiff tended to show that when the plaintiff was found early in the morning in an unconscious condition lying at the bottom of .this open cellar, that whatever railing there had been at the western end, which was between three and four feet wide, was broken down and the west end left open or partially so. The situation spoke, for itself, and his evidence made aprima facie case of the insufficiency of that railing to protect the lives and limbs of passers in the alley from the danger of falling in the subway. Kearney v. Railroad, 5 L. R. Q. B. 411; Khron v. Brock, 144 Mass. 516; Mullen v. St. John, 57 N. Y. 567; Franks v. City of St. Louis, 110 Mo. 516.
To meet this prima facie case the defendant introduced evidence to show that originally there had been constructed around this opening a sufficient iron railing ; that, while the western end had at one time been removed by the defendant’s servants to enable them to get some boilers down into this subway, the lower bar near the ground connecting the corner post with the
III. The remaining instructions complained of are all on the subject of contributory negligence. It is not necessary that they should be analyzed or examined in detail. That they should not have been given will become manifest by a consideration of the few plain, simple facts disclosed by the evidence. This open cellar-way, on the south side of the Laclede Hotel, runs lengthwise with the north side ■of the alley and is between three and four feet wide. Between its west end and Sixth street a big smokestack is located beside the building, whose diameter is about two and one half or three feet, thus extending nearly or quite as far toward the line of the alley as the cellar-way. It seems that, while the light from Sixth street shines into the alley, this smokestack casts the west end of the opening into the shade. The plaintiff, who the evidence shows was an industrious tailor of sober habits and a stranger to this part of the city, was passing along Sixth street on the night •of the accident, which was cold, dark and windy.
The plaintiff further testifies that, during the evening before his hat blew off, he had taken a glass of beer and three small glasses of some kind of bitters, which he says was a mild drink, and that he was not at all under the influence of liquor. In this he is corroborated by a witness who was with him during the evening, and who parted with him but a few moments before the accident. When he was found the next morning at the bottom of the subway in a helpless condition, he asked for a drink of coffee, but, upon the suggestion of the steward of the hotel, whiskey was given him instead. He was directly taken thence to the. dispensary, where a physician in charge upon a superficial examination,, based upon his appearance and the smell of alcohol on his breath, diagnosed the case as contusion of the scalp, chest and alcoholism, and sent him to the hospital where he was examined and treated by two physicians, one of whom had been his family physician for eight years, and no indication or sympton of alcoholism was found in his system.
We look in vain through these evidential facts for either idea suggested to the jury in the instructions that the plaintiff may have .been thrown into this opening by some unknown force or that he
For the errors noted, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for new trial.