193 Mo. App. 597 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1916
This is an action for damages arising from a fall by plaintiff while walking on a public street in the city of Sedalia. She recovered judgment for $1000 and defendant has appealed.
The facts are as follows Engineer street, in said city, runs north and south and is intersected at right angles by Eighteenth street running east and west. Nineteenth street is parallel to and the next street south of Eighteenth. Plaintiff lived on Nineteenth street one house east of Engineer street. For many years Etngineer has been one of the traveled streets of the city. About four years prior to the' plaintiff’s fall the city had graded this street from curb line to curb line. The street was level and smooth from property line to property line, and the grading consisted merely of taking out the dirt to a depth of eight or ten inches at the curb line on each side and making a well defined roadway between the two curb lines and leaving a space on each side of the roadway about eight feet wide. This space was between the property line and what is ordinarily the curb, and in other streets is the space that is occupied by the sidewalk and parking adjacent thereto.
Along the south side of Eighteenth street from the west side of Engineer is a concrete sidewalk which extends west to the principal part of the city and the nearest car line. From the east end of this sidewalk at the southwest corner of Eighteenth and Engineer streets, a crossing extends west across Engineer street to the southeast corner of Eighteenth and Engineer.
On the night of November 15, 1914, which was very dark, plaintiff was returning home from a neighbor’s. She came east along the south side of Eighteenth street and, reaching Engineer street, continued east across that street on the crossing till she came to the southeast corner of Eighteenth and Engineer. Here she turned south on the space used
It is the contention of the defendant that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. This contention proceeds upon the idea that inasmuch as there was no constructed sidewalk, made, of wood, stone, brick or other materials built on this eight foot space, the city could not be deemed to have undertaken the duty of keeping it in reasonably safe repair, and, therefore, could not be held liable. In support of this contention defendant cites Ely v. St. Louis, 181 Mo. 723; Ruppenthal v. St. Louis, 190 Mo. 213; Curran v. St. Joseph, 143 Mo. App. 618.
The doctrine of these cases is well established and no 'one would attempt to controvert or question them. It is quite true that a city, in merely accepting a street or by declaring that it is such, or in deciding to what extent the street shall be given to the public for use, acts in its governmental or legislative capacity, and cannot be held liable for any neglect of duty until after the city has acted in its ministerial capacity by giving the street to the public for use and inviting the public to travel the same. And since it is a governmental matter for the city to say to what extent it will offer a street to the public for use, if an individual attempts to use a portion which the city has neither' expressly nor impliedly invited him to use, and he is injured thereon, he cannot look to the city for damages.
But it must always be • remembered that it is not the improvement of the street that fixes liability for neglect of duty. It is the invitation on the part
In this case the street was level and smooth, fit for travel from property line to property line without anything being done to it.. When it is shown that such a street has been opened to the public for use, the invitation is that every part thereof suitable for travel may be used. When the roadway between the curb lines was graded and properly shaped up leaving an eight foot space on the east side of the street for a sidewalk, and in good condition for me as such without anything further to be done to it in order to make it suitable for travel, there is nothing to indicate to the traveling public that the invitation to use the street is limited to the roadway portion. Nor indeed was the invitation limited thereto in this case, for a crossing led from the southeast corner of Eighteenth and Engineer streets west across the latter to the north end of the sidewalk space in question. And as no actually constructed sidewalk led on from the termination of this crossing, it was in itself an invitation to the public to use the strip running south along the east side of Engineer street as a sidewalk. The city engineer admitted on cross-examination that there was a walk there and that the strip was “left there for people to walk on” but said there was no granitoid or other paved walk there. For several years the public had accepted the invitation, thus extended, and had used the strip as a sidewalk, and after these conditions had become established, a row of stakes was driven in the space
The charge that plaintiff can be held guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law is untenable. She knew the stakes were in the ground bu)t walked east on the crossing to the corner and then turned south on the sidewalk space, as she says “going along just as cautious and careful as I could.” In going to the corner she went to where she would get upon the walk and if she had kept on due south walking on the middle or east portion of the seven foot strip she would have missed the stakes, hut in the darkness, she veered a few feet to one side and fell over the pegs. The question whether she was exercising ordinary care or not was one for the jury. While her knowledge of the stakes was important as hearing on the question of her negligence, yet it does not result in declaring absolutely as a necessary conclusion of law that she was negligent. [Graney v. St. Louis, 141 Mo. 180, l. c. 185; Maus v. City of Springfield, 101 Mo. 613, l. c. 618; Beauvais v. City of St. Louis, 169 Mo. 500.]
The fact that the pegs were located near the west edge of the strip of ground left as a sidewalk
Even if the stakes were too far west to be in the space where the walk could be said to be, or where a constructed sidewalk would have been, still this does not convict plaintiff of contributory negligence as a matter of law or exculpate the city from liability. There was nothing to differentiate the parking from the walk proper in this case, and even in cases where there was a differentiation, the city has been held liable for an obstruction on the parking. [Fockler v. Kansas City, 94 Mo. 464. See, also, Bassett v. St. Joseph, 53 Mo. 290; Fairgrieve v. City of Moberly, 39 Mo. App. 37; Coffey v. Carthage, 186 Mo. 573; Kossman v. St. Louis, 153 Mo. 293, 299; Wiggins v. St. Louis, 135 Mo. 559, 566; Hutchinson v. Mullins, 189 Mo. 438, l. c. 452.]
Plaintiff’s instruction No. 1 does not assume that the city had thrown the portion of the street in controversy open to public use. On the contrary, it submits the question whether the strip in ques
The defendant asked seventeen instructions of which the court refused seven. We think they were
As the case was tried without prejudical error, the judgment is affirmed.