198 Mo. App. 140 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1917
Plaintiff sued the defendants below for damage to its stock of goods resulting from the alleged negligence of the defendants in allowing water under their control ■ to flood plaintiff’s merchandise. At the close.of plaintiff’s case the court gave a peremptory instruction to the jury to find against the plaintiff and in favor of each of the defendants, whereupon plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit and after an unavailing motion to set the same aside, brings this appeal.
Plaintiff below, appellant here, occupied the third floor of the building at 901-5 Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, for the purpose of carrying on its business of manufacturing and selling neckwear at wholesale. The building was a seven story commercial structure owned by the defendant Mallinckrodt, the several floors of which were occupied by various tenants. The defendant, Hirshfield Skirt Company, was, at the time
On the morning of the day in question, namely, Monday, June 4, 1913, when plaintiff’s place of business was opened, water was found to be dripping from the ceiling of the third floor, which was caused by a sink in the toilet room on the fourth floor overflowing, the water flowing into said sink from a partly open faucet. The water dripping onto plaintiff’s merchandise was the cause of the alleged damage of which plaintiff sues the said skirt company and the owner of the premises to recover the damage thus sustained.
The petition, after alleging the ownership and tenancy of the building, alleges that the “Skirt Company, its servants, agents and employees negligently and carelessly allowed and permitted a water faucet located in that portion of said building and premises occupied by said defendant skirt company to be and remain open and turned on and water was permitted to run from said faucet, so left open and turned on, and to overflow and to soak through the floor and drip and run. through and upon the portion of the stock of merchandise so maintained by plaintiff on said third floor of said building so that a portion of said stock was damaged, ruined and rendered worthless; that because of the negligence and carelessness of the defendant Mallinckrodt and of his agents, servants and employees in charge of said building and premises, the water upon said premises which, at the time said faucet has been, as aforesaid, left open and turned on, was turned off, but that said defendant Mallinckrodt, his aforesaid agents, servants and employees negligently and carelessly turned said water on without first ascertaining whether or not any faucets in said building might be so left as to cause said water 'to overflow and to damage the property of the tenants of said building, and particularly of this plaintiff; and that by reason of the negligence and carelessness of the defendant, Hirshfield Skirt Company, in permitting
Then followed an itemized list of the property alleged to have been damaged; an allegation of damages in the sum of $760.78 and a prayer for judgment in that amount with interest and costs. The answer of each of the defendants was a general denial.
Plaintiff,' to prove its case, introduced its lease with the defendant landlord in which we find the following provisions: “That lessee and all holding under it agree to use reasonable diligence in the care and protection of said premises during the term of this lease; to keep the water pipes and plumbing in good order; . . .” Plaintiff also introduced the lease from the defendant owner of the building, to the defendant, Hirshfield Skirt Company, which lease contained the following: “The lessee further agrees . . . that they will keep the water, gas pipes and also the plumbing in good order . . . that they will keep the plumbing connections of the premises occupied by them open and in good order; that they will pay the water license for said premises according to the regulations of the water department of said city. ’ ’
The plaintiff, to sustain its cause of action, then introduced the secretary of the defendant company, J. Laskowitz, who testified that the defendant skirt company occupied the fourth floor and that the plaintiff occupied thé^third floor of the building on the day in ques
The plaintiff then put on the porter of the said defendant skirt company as their witness. He corroborated the witness Laskowitz, that as he entered the building with him they found the water was overflowing the sink and flowing onto the floor; that he immediately went to the third floor, occupied by the plaintiff company, and saw water on the boxes containing the merchandise of the plaintiff company, and could see where the water had dripped down from the ceiling above.
Several witnesses testified for plaintiff as to the water dripping from the ceiling, and that the water had fallen onto the merchandise of the plaintiff company, and testified as to the amount of the damage. There was testimony to the effect that some twenty-five by thirty feet of the ceiling was wet and the water dripping-down from the ceiling- and from the beams supporting it.
E. Hirshfield, the president of the defendant skirt company, was put on the stand. He testified that on the 4th day of June, 1913, the defendant skirt company occupied merely the front half of the third floor under a lease from the owner of the building, and that the toilet and wash room was for the joint use of themselves and such tenant as might occupy the other portion of the
The sole question to be determined here is whether or not plaintiff, on the facts as shown in the record, was entitled as against either of the defendants, to go to the jury.
In considering demurrers to the evidence and peremptory instructions at the close of plaintiff’s case, “all evidence and inferences unfavorable to appellant must be disregarded and all evidence and all reasonable inferences favorable to him must be taken into consideration.” [Buesching v. St. Louis Gas Light Co., 73 Mo. 219; Frankel v. Hudson (Mo.), 196 S. W. l. c. 1123 Hanser v. Bieber (Mo.) 197 S. W. l. c. 70.]
We will first take up the question as to the peremptory instruction given by the court, that the jury under. the pleadings and evidence must find for the defendant, Edward Mallinckrodt, the owner of the building. The allegations of negligence in plaintiff’s petition as to the defendant, Mallinckrodt, are set out above-in our statement of facts.
The written leases introduced by plaintiff, under which leases both the plaintiff and the defendant skirt company occupied premises in the building for a term of_ years, specifically provide that the water and the plumbing was to be kept in good order by the lessees. That fact taken together with the testimony that the drain of the basin was sufficient to carry off all the water, even when' the faucet was turned on to its full capacity, and there being no evidence of any defective condition or construction of the basin or water pipes, attributable to the landlord, and no evidence offered that the defendant, landlord, or any of his agents, servants or employees, turned on any water in the building without a previous investigation as to whether the faucet was open, the plaintiff clearly failed to make out a case, and the court properly gave the peremptory in
We next come to the question as to whether, under the record, the plaintiff has made out a sufficient case to go to the jury against the defendant skirt company.
There was evidence that the defendant skirt company occupied the front half of the fourth floor under a written lease and that no other tenant occupied any part of the balance of the floor on the day on which the damage was sustained by plaintiff. The secretary of the defendant company testified that the wash room in which the faucet and sink in question were located, was used by the company’s male employees, and that he personally made it his business each evening before leaving thé building to see to it that the faucet was turned off and no obstacle in the sink, and that on the-night previous (meaning undoubtedly on the Saturday night previous, a Sunday intervening, the record showing that the damage was discovered on Monday morning) before leaving he had examined the faucet in question and found that it was turned off; that he was the last man to leave the premises and had locked the premises. He further testified that he was the man who unlocked the premises on Monday morning and that to all appearances no one had been there in his absence. That on entering he found the water overflowing and the faucet turned on perhaps three-eighths of its capacity; that he examined the drain of the sink but found nothing to obstruct the flow of the water; that the water drained off very slowly but later in the day the drain again carried off the water even when the faucet was turned on full force; that he did not know what' caused the temporary obstruction. He testified that the water had overflown onto the floor from the sink. There was evidence that the water had wet a space on the wall beneath of some twenty-five by thirty feet, and that the water dripped down onto the plaintiff’s merchandise on the floor below and damaged same.
Added the fact that the defendant skirt company’s lease contained the provisions that: The lessee further
Are then the facts as we have stated them sufficient to warrant the submission to the jury of the question whether the defendant skirt company was guilty of negligence?
"While the secretary of the defendant skirt company testified that when he left the premises the night previous the water was turned off, we know of no rule of law which would obligate the jury to find from that testimony that the faucet was in fact turned off when the witness left. The other facts in the case seem to us sufficient from which the jury could infer that the wit-' ness was mistaken and that the faucet was in fact partly open when the witness left the night before, and from the fact of the extent to which the water had spread and gone through the ceiling below, that the faucet had been running a considerable period of time. Inferences of this kind, when based on sufficient facts, are clearly within the province of a jury.
In the case of Chicago Telephone Co. v. Commercial Union Insurance Co., 131 Ill. App. 248, the court held on facts very much similar to the present case, that the burden was upon the appellee (defendant) to disprove the inference of negligence arising from its control of the wash room and the presence of its employees immediately proceeding the overflow. In other words, the responsibility for overflow of water was held to depend upon the question of control and responsibility held to rest with the landlord or tenant as the case may be, according to who is in control of the source or cause thereof and where an overflow is established the presumption is that the same resulted from the fault of the party in control of the cause or source thereof.
In Killion v. Power, 51 Pa. State Rep. 429, we find a case in which an action was brought for negligence
In the case of Rosenfield v. Arrol, 44 Minn. 395, with reference to cases like we have at bar, it is said: “Negligence, which is the want or absence of ordinary care, is the gist of the action, and the burden was upon the plaintiffs to prove facts from which it could be fairly be inferred that the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the injury. The evidence need not be direct and positive. The fact of negligence in any
In Slater v. Adler, 8 Misc. Rep. (N. Y.) 310, the court said: ‘ ‘ Where there are two tenants in occupation of the premises, one being above the other, while it is true there is no contractual relation between them, yet each is bound to see to it that no injury shall happen to the other by reason of any negligence on his part. The cáse shows that there may have been a stopcock on the floor occupied by respondent’s assignors which could be reached by both them and the appellant, yet the evidence makes it clear that there was also a stopcock on the floor of the appellant’s premises, and that the water vhich ran on the respondent’s premises flowed through that stopcock into barrels, from which there was a waste pipe which probably, from some cause which does not appear, became choked up. This made the appellant liable.” [Moore v. Hoedel, 34 N. Y. 532; Eakin v. Brown, 1 E. D. Smith, 36; Totten v. Phipps, 52 N. Y. 356.]
This court in an opinion by Thompson, J., in Hill v. Scott, 38 Mo. App. l. c. 374, adopts the doctrine quoted in that opinion as follows: ‘ ‘ There must be reasonable evidence of negligence. But where the thing is. shown to be under the management of defendant or his servants, and the accident is such as, in the ordinary course of things, does not happen if those who have the management use proper care, it affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of explanation by defendants, that the accident arose from want of ordinary care.”
We hold that the plaintiff made out a ease sufficient to go to the jury as against the defendant, Hirshfield- Skirt Company. The court below, by taking the case away from the jury as against said defendant, de
As to the defendant, Edward Mallinckrodt, the judgment of nonsuit is affirmed; hut as to the defendant, Hirshfield Skirt Company, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with' directions to the trial court to set aside the nonsuit and grant the plaintiff a new trial.