145 Mo. App. 285 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This action is to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendants. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of six hundred dollars, and the cause is before us on the appeal of defendants.
The injury occurred in the city of Maryville in the afternoon of September 18, 1905, at a performance of a traveling show of which defendants were the proprietors. Plaintiff and her husband .had paid the admission fee charged by defendants and were occupying “general admission” seats in the “main tent,” when a violent storm wrecked one end of the tent and threw the spectators of the performance into a panic. In the general rush to escape, plaintiff was struck by a falling board or timber and one of her legs was broken. The issue of negligence presented by the pleadings and evidence is whether or not the supports of the tent were weakened by the servants of -defendants in preparation to break camp during the performance in the circus tent and shortly before the storm broke. Plaintiff conten de that such negligence was the proximate cause of the in jury, while defendants deny that the supports wew weakened and contend that the storm that wrecked the tent Avas so extraordinary in its suddenness and violence that it should be classed in law as an act of God.
A thorough description of the tent is essential to a proper understanding of the points in controversy. Below in Fig. 1, is a reproduction of a photograph of a perfect model of the tent. Fig. 2, exhibits a detail of the- supporting ropes and the stakes to which they were attached.
The tent was 440 feet long and 190 feet wide. It had six center poles and three circles of lesser poles to support and give to the canvas necessary elevation and convexity. The center poles were 54 feet long; the poles of the inner circle were 41 1-2 feet long; those of the next circle were 31 feet and those of the outside circle which were set back of the seats for spectators were 14 feet. The frame of the covering consisted of large manilla rope interwoven, to which was sewed the canvas which was of ten ounce drill. The center poles were held in place by independent guy ropes. The covering was ribbed with radiating lines of rope which continued beyond the circumference of the canvas and became the guy ropes by which the canvas was securely fastened to stakes driven in the ground. The main guy
Plaintiff and her husband were seated about midway in a tier of general admission seats on the north side of the tent. It had been a rainy day without any indication of a windstorm. The spectators in the tent heard it thunder and begin to rain. Then it grew dark and the wind began to blow very hard. Symptoms of
The evidence respecting the violence of the storm is conflicting. Many witnesses say they had been in storms where the wind blew harder; others that it was the strongest wind they had experienced. All agree that it was a very hard wind and the physical facts show that it possessed great destructive power. The evidence is voluminous and we shall not go into the details relating to the characteristics of the storm. Summarized, it establishes beyond controversy the existence of the following facts:
1st. The wind storm was unheralded and appeared suddenly.
2nd. The wind was not rotary but undulatory.
3rd. The destructive path was very narrow and the period of destruction brief — not longer than two or three minutes.
It devolved on plaintiff to plead and prove that defendants were guilty of a breach of some duty they owed plaintiff and that such breach was the proximate cause of the injury. The gravamen of her action, if one exists, must be negligence, and to be entitled to a recovery, her evidence must not leave the inference of actionable negligence open to conjecture or speculation but must show a causal connection between the alleged negligent act and her injury. Tents, however well constructed and erected, are not as substantial as other structures for housing people and in voluntarily occupying the tent of defendants, plaintiff assumed all the natural and inherent risks pertaining to habitations of that character. On the other hand, in inviting the public to occupy their tents for their own profit, defendants bound themselves to exercise reasonable care to protect their invitees against "injury from other than natural or accidental causes. Persons engaged in the business of providing public amusements must observe care commensurate to the circumstances of the situation to protect their patrons against injury. They must act with the care to be expected of an ordinarily careful and prudent person in their position.
This is not a case for the application of the rule of res ipsa loquitur. The mere fact that the tent collapsed in a severe windstorm will not support an inference of negligence, nor should such inference be held to arise from the additional fact that defendants had begun “pulling up stakes” preparatory to “folding their tents.” The burden was on plaintiff to show that the pulling of the stakes sustained a causal relation to the collapse of the tent. We shall concede that defendants’ contention that stakes could not be pulled until after the tent was lowered is presented by the evidence as a debatable issue of fact and, for present purposes, shall assume that each alternate stake had been pulled be
Turning back to Fig. 2, it will be observed that the stakes of each group of four that bear the numbers 1 and 3, could be pulled without in any manner mdening the distance between the guy ropes that fastened the tent to the ground. Stake 1 was but an additional anchor for a main guy of which stake 2, was the main anchor. Stake 3, was the anchor of an auxiliary guy that, if put to use, could only affect the holding power of the main guy. The withdrawal of stakes 1 and 3 still left each rib of the roof of the structure attached to the ground and, as we said, did not enlarge the space between the supporting guy ropes. Had any of the stakes numbered 2 and 4, been pulled out by the storm, or had any of the guy ropes been broken, a causal connection would have been shown between the pulling of stakes 1 and 3, and the collapse of the tent, but no such result was disclosed and we fail to perceive how it can be said that defendant weakened supports which did not yield to, the storm but remained intact. Nor can it be said with reason that the pulling of the stakes had anything to do with the inflation of the tent. Had any of the supports given way under the strain of the storm, one could understand readily how, by widening the distance between the holding guys, an entrance might be given to the wind, but with every support remaining sound and taut, what opening could have been given the wind that would not have been offered had no stakes been pulled? Doubtless the wind found its way into the tent through many apertures some of which Avere opened in the side walls by the outrushing people.
Unquestionably, the collapse was due to the breaking of the poles, and this was caused by the violent
The judgment is reversed.