141 Mo. 180 | Mo. | 1897
— This action was instituted by plaintiff against the city of St. Louis to recover damages for an injury sustained by her while walking along one of the sidewalks of said city. The petition alleged that on the morning of April 25, 1889, the plaintiff, while walking along the west sidewalk of Yan Burén, an open street of the city, at a point near her home, she was tripped and thrown violently to the ground by reason of an iron pipe or water meter that was placed thereon, by the consent of the city, and that was left exposed so as to protrude several inches above the
Just what reason prompted the instruction given by the court is only to be gained by the contention now made by the counsel for defendant to sustain the court’s action. But from any standpoint from which the facts of the case may be viewed, to us the instruction seems erroneous. No dispute is made by counsel of the city’s duty to keep the sidewalk at the place where the plaintiff claimed to have been injured, in a condition of reasonable safety for pedestrians, called upon to use the same-by night as well as by day; nor
While the plaintiff in this case does testify that she was well acquainted with the sidewalk on which she was injured, and that she had known of its defective condition for a number of years and could have observed its defective condition by close watching at the time of night at which she was injured, and further that she could have taken the walk on the opposite side of the street and have had an unobstructed way to her home, her knowledge alone of the defect in the walk and failure to take the opposite side of the street do not absolutely preclude a recovery, for she also testified that the night was quite dark, and that she did not see the depression and impediment on the walk at the time; that in fact she did not think that she had gotten that far on her road until she stepped into the depression and stumbled over the iron that caused her to fall, and further that there was a space of three or four feet to the inside of the walk opposite the depression that was in a perfectly safe condition for use by pedestrians and over which she was intending to pass, as she had frequently done before with perfect safety.
The case seems to have been tried upon the theory that mere knowledge on part of plaintiff as to the condition of the walk was an absolute protection to the city against all accidents resulting to her from such defect, a proposition which, if followed to its logical ending, would make the notorious misconduct of a city in
The court is warranted in acting only in those cases where by giving to the plaintiff the benefit of every reasonable inference that may be drawn from her testimony and the surrounding facts, no other conclusions could fairly be reached than that she disregarded all rules of common prudence and caution in the act assumed. When known or manifest danger is assumed or deliberately undertaken, the court can declare the legal effect thereof by a mandatory instruction, as was attempted in this case, but when the thing undertaken is such that men or women of ordinary intelligence might reasonably differ as to the hazard of the act, the question is one of fact for the jury to determine.
Nor can it be said as further contended by defendant, that plaintiff was bound to abandon the use of the sidewalk in question and pursue another course home
It can hardly be said that a depression of four or five inches in depth by two feet square (at the outer edge of a sidewalk five or six feet wide) caused by the removal of part of the stone from the walk and the exposure to view of an iron piping above the bottom thereof, over which a person might stumble and fall, should be called a thing of such known and recognized danger that a court would be authorized to declare it such as a legal conclusion, and the use of the sidewalk in which it existed as an act of negligence such as to defeat absolutely a recovery in the event of an injury resulting from the attempted use of the walk. The way that a particular accident along a given route might have been avoided is always known to the party injured by the after suggestion of a different route, as that the place itself where the injury occurred is dangerous; but ordinary action is not inspired with such forethought, and the law does not impute negligence from the simple failure to foresee and escape such danger by that other route. Loewerv. City of Sedalia, 77 Mo. 431. “Forethought and experience are widely different monitors.”
The issue of plaintiff's negligence under the facts of this case should have been submitted to the jury for their finding and the case is reversed that a new trial may be had.