106 Mo. App. 52 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
The plaintiff’s case upon which she relies to recover is substantially as follows: On the night of January 19, 1900, having heard an alarm for fire, in company with her sister-in-law she went to the southeast corner of the Paseo and Tenth street in defendant city, at which point she learned that there was no fire but that a horse had fallen into a ditch dug in Tenth street by the Metropolitan Street Railway Company. She then started north to go across -said street to the place where the horse was in the ditch, when she encountered said ditch (which ran east and west in said street) and fell into it. She claimed that the ditch was seven or eight feet deep and about four feet wide; that it was a dark night; that there were no lights or barriers placed about it to give her warning; and that the only light in the neighborhood was a gas lamp at the street comer which did not show at the excavation.
The evidence also tended to show that plaintiff was injured as the result of her fall. The excavation was made by said street railway company for the purpose of putting under ground its electric feed wires, and was located between its tracks laid in Tenth street. The defendant’s evidence went to show that it was two feet four inches wide and was in sections of then or twelve feet in length with intervening spaces which were connected by tunneling. While the excavation was in progress the operation of the street cars was continued. The defendant’s foreman testified that the excavated earth was piled up along on the north side of the ditch to the height of several feet, and that on the evening in question lights had been set thirty feet apart on the unexcavated, part of the ditch and that lights had also been placed on the earth along the north side thereof. David Wilson, the contractor, testified that he kept a watchman at the place. Other evidence was to the effect that the lights were in place at the time plaintiff fell into the ditch.
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $500.
Defendant complains of the action of the court in the giving and refusing instructions. Instruction number one is as follows:
1. “The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that prior to January 19, 1900, Kansas City authorized the Metropolitan Street Railway Company to dig a trench or ditch in and along Tenth street from Grove street to Flora avenue, in Kansas City, and that said company by its contractors did
The petition is not bottomed upon the failure of defendant to construct barriers and have lights to guard the ditch, as provided by .ordinance, as was the case in Skinner v. Stifel, 55 Mo. App. 9. This is an action at common law for negligence notwithstanding it alleged that the defendant failed in its duty to erect barriers and place lights, as no ordinance is pleaded. In such cases proof of dereliction in that respect is evidence of negligence, but it does not constitute negligence per se. Said instruction contains two errors, viz.: It requires that defendant should have provided both the barriers
The refusal of the court to give instructions numbered three and seven asked by appellant was not error. The theory of said instructions is that if the barriers and lights were provided to guard the trench and that they had been removed before plaintiff fell into the ditch, without defendant’s fault, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. They were not based upon the facts. The evidence did not show that the barriers were provided. The court modified defendant’s instruction number four, which was as follows: ‘ ‘ The court instructs the jury that it is the duty of people travelling upon the streets of the city to use ordinary care and to use their eyes and other senses to avoid any defects in the streets which are obvious or which they could discover by the exercise of ordinary care,” etc. The modification consisted in omitting the words, “to use their eyes and other senses.” In a recent opinion of the Supreme Court, not yet reported (David E. Wheat v. City of St. Louis), the court uses the following language:
“While the city owes the citizen the duty to keep the highways reasonably safe for persons to pass over, the citizen owes the city the duty to use his God given •sense, and not to run into obstructions that he is familiar with, or which by the exercise of ordinary care he could discover and easily avoid.” ■
Under this ruling defendant’s instruction was
For the errors noted the cause is reversed and remanded.