In this action by Genevieve Langhammer to recover $10,250 damages from the City of Mexico a jury found the issue of negligent injury in favor of the plaintiff and fixed her damages at $4,000. The trial court *833 overruled the city’s motions for judgment but sustained its motion for a new trial on the specified ground that the court had erred in giving plaintiff’s instruction three as to the measure of damages. Since the court was of the view, apparently, that there had been no errors or unfairness as to the essential merits of the case, the court ordered a new trial on the issue of damages only. Both the plaintiff and the defendant filed notices of appeal to this court.
In these circumstances the city’s unbriefed, conclusional, jurisdictional statement that the amount “in dispute” exceeds the sum of $7,500 (Const.Mо. Art. 5, Sec. 3, V.A.M.S.) is wholly inadequate and not within either the spirit or purpose of Rule 1.08. See the illustrative note and comment to the amended rule, 42 V.A.M.S.; Jameson v. Fox,
Mrs. Langhammer was injured on September 30, 1952, when her husband drove the family automobile to the city dump for the purpose of disposing of refuse. The allegation of her petition was that in connection with the operation and maintenance of the dump the city “constructed and
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maintained certain public ways and streets within the limits of the dumping grounds,” that the unguarded ways were negligently maintainеd with burning coals beneath their surface so that when the plaintiff walked towards the dump to dispose of her refuse the surface of the road gave way and she was precipitated into the glowing embers beneath. ■ The city contends that its motions for judgment shоuld have been sustained, that the court erroneously refused its proffered instruction and in any event that it is entitled to a new trial on all issues because the plaintiff's instruction hypothesizing her theory of recovery was erroneous in certain particulars. It is nоt necessary to consider each of these claims separately and in detail; essentially they are all a part of the city’s basic claim that Mrs. Lang-hammer was injured “on the dump area proper,” the maintenance of which was a “govеrnmental function” for which there is no tort liability on the part of the city. Annotations
As to the fact of ways in, on, or around the dump the city takes the position, as stated, that Mrs. Langhammer was injured “on the dump area proper,” that if vehicles bearing trash “drove on and over more or less tire track marked ‘roadways’ existing on the surface of the dumping area proper” the fact would not change the rule with respect to the city’s immunity in maintaining the dump. To summarize, briefly, this is the city’s position and the essence of its claim: “It, therefore, follows that the City of Mexico, in providing a City dump for the use of the public and in keeping the top of the dump smooth so that vehicles and pedestrians could go thereon to the end that the very рurposes of the dump be fulfilled is under no obligation to account to any private person for the manner in which the aforesaid governmental duty or function is performed. * * * And this is true whether the injured person claims to have received his hurt on that portion of the dumping area unmarked by automobile tracks or human foot, or whether the situs of the injury be the pathway marked out by the tires of motor vehicles driven in and upon the dump area to discharge their cargo. * * * Hence any evidence in this case tо the effect that cinders, bricks, mortar and cement brought out to the City dump were spread over the top of the surface thereof would have no effect other than to show an effort on the part of the City to keep the dumping ground itself in condition for use at all times under all conditions of weather.”
The city’s argument and its fear of chaos and confusion with respect to its liability overlooks the fact that it may often
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perform dual functions or act in overlapping capacities, for one of which there may he immunity from liability while if injury results from the other there may be no immunity. Thus, where there was leakage of water from a city hydrant into the plaintiff’s basement and the city water department was operated “as a commercial enterprise” аnd also for fire protection and cleaning streets and the hydrant may have been left open by a water department employee, the court quoted approvingly from Lober v. Kansas City, Mo.,
In this connection, while there is no duty on a city to maintain in reasonable safety portions of a street outside or beyond the portion set aside for travel (Hauck v. Kansas City Public Service Co.,
Since 1928 the City of Mexico has owned a 105-acre tract of land adjacent to its northeast limits known as “the city farm.” The city maintains a baseball field, together with a grandstand and a well, a sewage disposal plant, a dog pound, a garbage disposаl and a city dump on the farm. It is not necessary to describe in detail this unexceptional common city dump, its maintenance, use and growth; in 1952 the dumping area proper extended over approximately three acres and at the time of trial covered about five acres. Route “J,” an extension of a city street, runs in a northerly direction past the city farm and “leading off” from Route “J” there is a city maintained roadway into the 105-acre tract. Just beyond the baseball field the roadway “forks” to the right, past the caretaker’s house and into the dumping area. There are no formally designed streets in the dumping area proper, but around the perimeter the city has frequently used a bulldozer to keep the approach to the dumping arеa level and cinders, rocks and gravel have been graded into the level areas. Vehicles traveling in and out of the area, sometimes as many as eighty-five in a day, have made well-defined paths or ways called “loops” or “circles” arоund the dump proper. But again it is not necessary to detail the evidence, it is sufficient to say that the plaintiff’s proof supports the inference and finding that the city so operated the dump that it created the “loops” and “circles” as well as the roadway past the caretaker’s house and that they have been used by the public for many years. The Langhammer automobile was “about two-thirds of the way down the road to the dump,” at a point where the level-surfaced area was about
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thirty fеet wide, some distance from the actual trash area, when the crust of the surface gave way. In these circumstances a jury could reasonably find that the “circles,” “loops” and leveled areas constituted a city maintained “way” with consequеnt liability for their negligent maintenance even though they came into existence and were maintained as a part of the city’s exercise of the governmental function of operating a city dump. Ray v. City of St. Paul,
Thе instruction on the measure of damages was erroneous (Petty v. Henroid, Mo.,
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All concur.
