116 Mo. App. 332 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
(after stating the facts). —
First. The existence of a duty on the part of the person complained against to protect the complainant from the injury of which he complains.
Second. The failure of the defendant to perform that duty.
Third. Injury to the plaintiff resultant from such failure of the defendant.
Where these elements are brought together, they unitedly constitute actionable negligence. It is obvious that the absence of an affirmative showing of any one of these essential elements renders the complaint bad or
The law raises a duty or obligation in many instances against one person and in favor of another, and it is well settled in numerous adjudicated cases that where premises are in the occupancy and under the control of a party and used by him as a place for the transaction of business, and persons are either expressly or implied-, ly invited thereto to trade, the proprietor owes to those entering therein or thereupon in response to such invitation, the duty of ordinary care to keep said premises in a condition reasonably safe for the use of such parties so invited in the transaction of their business; and if the premises are not in such reasonably safe condition, it is the duty of the proprietor to warn the customer of such unsafe condition if he knows of it and it is unknown to the customer. [O’Donnell v. Patton, 117 Mo. 13-19, 22 S. W. 903; Kean v. Schoening, 103 Mo. App. 77, 77 S. W. 335; Welch v. McAllister, 15 Mo. App. 492; Carraway v. Long, 7 Mo. App. 595; Carleton v. Iron & Steel Works, 99 Mass. 216; Parker v. Portland Pub. Co., 69 Me. 173; Pierce v. Whitcomb, 48 Vt. 127; Sweeny v. Railway Co., 10 Allen (Mass.) 368; 1 Thompson Comm, on Neg., 985; Ray on Negligence of Implied Duties, 18-19; 21 Amer. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 471; Beach on Cont. Neg. (3 Ed.), sec. 51.]
In Pierce v. Whitcomb, supra, at page 131, the very able and learned Judge Redfield said: “But if one departs substantially from the provided way of access, or, becoming the guest or patron in a place of business, and of his own motion goes in the dark into places of danger, and is injured, he voluntarily takes the peril and risk upon himself.”
Our attention has not been called to any case by the learned counsel where it was held that in the absence of an affirmative showing of express invitation or order or conduct equivalent thereto, such as the proprietor or other person in authority leading the way or accompanying the injured party into such private apartments, a recovery has been had, or where it has been asserted by any court or text-writer that under such circumstances any duty was owing by the proprietor or occupant to the complainant, and after diligent research in a vain attempt to sustain this judgment, we have been unable to
For the reason that the respondent was a mere li