204 Mo. 604 | Mo. | 1907
This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court of Johnson county, granting the plaintiff a new trial after a verdict for the defendant.
The action was one for damages caused by an alleged defective and dangerous condition of a street in the city of Warrensburg. The petition in substance alleged that the city of Warrensburg, on the 17th day .of December, 1902, and for a long time prior thereto, was and ever since has been a municipal corporation
Defendant in its answer admitted its incorporation and that the streets mentioned were public streets and highways of said city as stated in the petition, but denied the other allegations, and pleaded contributory negligence. The reply was a general denial.
The evidence tended to show that a wooden culvert was located across Main street and extended across said street and had been so located for a number of years prior to the 17th of December, 1902. On or about December 8, 1902, the.street commissioner of the said city, with other employees of the city, removed this boxing or wooden culvert, leaving a ditch or excavation some 18 inches or two feet in width and about the same depth as the place where the culvert had been located. The sides of the ditch were left perpendicular or almost so and were compact and hard from long and continuous use of the street by the public. After removing the boxing, the street commissioner caused the same to be filled with loose dirt and left it. The wheels of vehicles passing along the street immediately afterwards
■Defendant’s evidence tended to prove that its street commissioner had the box removed from across Main-street ; that it was sixteen inches wide and fourteen inches deep, and that they took it out by digging by the side and lifting the box out and then put the dirt back in the hole, and also put in other loose dirt in the place from which the box had been removed, and this dirt was tramped in with the foot and when the trench was filled it was rounded up on top some twelve inches high above the level of the surface. Witness for the defendant also testified that this was the way they always fixed them up, the way they always left them; that this was the usual and customary way of fixing places of that kind. Defendant also introduced evidence tending to show that the condition of the rut was not as dangerous as stated by plaintiff’s witnesses and that other people in their usual.ways of travel had crossed it .with loaded wagons and other vehicles. The street commissioner testified that after filling the ditch he left it and neither saw nor heard any more of it until he heard of plaintiff’s injury. Mr. Brewer, one of the city councilmen and a member of thg street and alley committee, testified that he had passed over this ditch daily from the time the culvert was removed until the plaintiff was injured; that he had hauled a load of wood over that place on the day before plaintiff was hurt, and he had no moré difficulty there than he did at other places in the road, that the roads were all bad. It had been raining and had sleeted the day before.
At tire time of the occurrence the plaintiff was being driven in Hout’s buggy in a trot at the rate of
No. 4. “The court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that the defendant city was not negligent in removing the culvert or gutter from across Main street and filling the place from which it was taken with dirt or earth, and that after the same was removed and the place so filled with earth, or dirt, said street at said place was in a reasonably safe condition for the us.e of the public, then you must find for the defendant; although you may believe that the same afterwards became in an unsafe and dangerous condition from the rains and travel thereon or from any other cause.”
No. 5. “The court instructs the jury that the defendant city had a perfect right to remove the culvert or gutter from across Main street, and unless you find and believe from the evidence that the defendant failed to exercise ordinary care in filling the place from which the same was removed, so that the same was unsafe and dangerous and not reasonably safe for travel thereon in the ordinary modes of travel by persons exercising ordinary care and caution for their own safety, then you must find for the defendant.”
No. 6. “The court instructs the jury that it is not for every defect or imperfection in a street, even though it may .cause an injury, that the defendant city is liable, but that the defect or imperfection must be such that on its account the street is not reasonably safe for the people traveling thereon when exercising ordinary care for their own safety and traveling in the usual modes.”
No. 8. “The court instructs the jury that the burden of proof in this case devolves upon the plaintiff to prove to your satisfaction by the greater weight of credible testimony in the case, that the defendant city was negligent in removing the culvert or gutter from across Main street and filling the place from which the same was taken with earth or dirt, at the place where the plaintiff claims to have been injured; and by the burden of proof is meant the greater weight of the credible testimony in the case.”
No. 9. “The court instructs the jury that the defendant city is not liable as an insurer of the safety of those who travel along its streets. Even if you find that the plaintiff was injured upon the street of the defendant city, that fact is not sufficient in itself to enable plaintiff to recover unless you find that the city negligently and carelessly removed the gutter or culvert on Main street and filled the same with earth or dirt, rendering the same not in a reasonably safe condition for travel upon it at the place where the plaintiff alleged he was injured, and that plaintiff was injured by such negligence, without any fault or negligence on the part of the plaintiff directly contributing thereto.”
I. The only proposition for consideration on this appeal is whether the circuit court erred in granting plaintiff a new trial. The circuit court assigned as its reason for granting a new trial that it had erred in giving defendant’s seventh instruction, which is in these words: “ The court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that the plaintiff
In Cohn v. Kansas City, 108 Mo. 392, tbe action was against tbe city for damages resulting from personal injuries sustained by reason of a defective sidewalk and the court at tbe request of plaintiff instructed tbe jury that tbe fact that plaintiff knew tbe condition of tbe street would not prevent a recovery “if she used sucb care in attempting to pass along said street as persons ordinarily use under sucb circumstances,” and in another instruction tbe court told tbe jury that ‘ ‘ ordinary care is just sucb care as a person should ordinarily exercise under sucb circumstances. ’ ’ This court said: “ Tbe court erred in both of these definitions; for ordinary care is that care which a prudent person ordinarily uses under like circumstances, which is another and different thing from such care as persons ordinarily use under like circumstances.”
In this case tbe circuit court properly directed tbe jury that ‘ ‘ ordinary care as used in these instructions means sucb care and prudence as an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under tbe circumstances detailed in evidence, and negligence means tbe failure to exercise ordinary care. ’ ’ In its first instruction for tbe plaintiff, tbe court directed tbe jury “that it was tbe duty of tbe city to exercise reasonable care to keep tbe streets in a reasonably safe condition for tbe passage along sucb streets of persons in tbe exercise of ordinary care, in vehicles. ”
In Perrette v. Kansas City, 162 Mo. 238, tbe court bad occasion to consider this question. Tbe circuit court in that case instructed tbe jury that it was tbe duty of tbe city to keep tbe sidewalk in a condition reasonably safe for the use of tbe public and tbe plaintiff bad tbe right to presume that this duty bad been performed.
In tbe discussion of that instruction it was said:
In a leading case on this subject it was said: “The fact that plaintiff had notice of the existence of the excavation did not preclude her from a recovery if she fell into the ditch without any fault or negligence on her part.” [Russell v. Columbia, 74 Mo. 494; Barr v. Kansas City, 105 Mo. 560; Graney v. St. Louis, 141 Mo. 180; Maus v. Springfield, 101 Mo. 613; Chilton v. St. Joseph, 143 Mo. 192.]
In Coffey v. Carthage, 186 Mo. 585, Fox, J., speaking for this court, said: “If plaintiff had no knowledge of the defect or hole in the sidewalk, then she had
II. As to the contention that the city street commissioner was guilty of no negligence because this was the way he filled all such holes, we cannot give our approval. The jury were at liberty to find that he had been negligent in filling all of them. He could not establish a standard of care and safety by his own conduct in that regard.
Much has been said in the brief for defendant in regard to confining plaintiff to the negligent construction alone. We think the court properly submitted the issues as to that, but the petition counted, not only on the original negligent construction or act in leaving such a hole filled only with loose dirt, but the continuing nuisance and the continuing duty of defendant to repair the highway. This defect was not the act of a third party of which the city had no notice but was the city’s own act of which it was bound to take notice.
Our conclusion is that the seventh instruction was reversible error and should not have been given. Otherwise the case seems to have been well tried. The judgment of the circuit court granting a new trial was right and is affirmed.