139 Mo. App. 187 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff from falling on a board sidewalk in St. Joseph, a city of the second class. Plaintiff alleges that her injuries were caused by the negligence of defendant. The verdict of the jury was for the defendant but the trial court sustained plaintiff’s motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. Defendant appealed from the judgment awarding a new trial.
In such cases we do not interfere with the discretion exercised by the trial judge unless we find either that the petition fails to state a cause of action or that the proof adduced by the plaintiff is insufficient to raise an issue to go to the triers of fact. We do not weigh the evidence except for the purpose of determining whether that most favorable to the cause of action asserted is substantial. Defendant recognizes this rule, but contends that plaintiff has failed to make out a case for the jury and argues, first, that the notice of the injury given defendant was fatally defective for the reason that it failed to state the place of the injury with sufficient definiteness; second, that the evidence most favorable to plaintiff fails to accuse defendant of negligence and, third, that it does shows that the injury was the direct result of plaintiff’s own negligence. Should we find that any of these contentions is well taken, a proper case would be presented for our interference with the action of the trial court in granting a new trial.
The evidence of plaintiff discloses the following state of facts: The injury occurred early in the morning of August 28, 1907, on Hammond street .between Lookout street and Swift avenue, all public streets of the city. Hammond street runs east and west, the
The negligence alleged in the petition is as follows :
“That on the 28th day of August, 1907, and for a long time prior thereto, Hammond street, between Lookout streets on the east and Swift avenue on the west was a public highway and thoroughfare of said city, and that on said date there was a wooden sidewalk constructed upon and along the north side of Hammond street between the points named, consisting of two stringers running lengthwise and having cross-planks*191 nailed thereto which were about four feet long, that at a point on said sidewalk about one hundred and ten feet east of Swift avenue said walk had become old and crooked, and uneven and out of repair, and the cross-hoards had become partly rotten, and the stringers underneath said walk had become weak and bent, rotten and decayed, and the braces underneath said stringers had become removed, and the dirt underneath (of) said stringers and braces had been permitted to wash away, causing the south side of said walk to drop and tilt from a horizontal, and to he sunken, and uneven and rough, and that on account of such defects said walk was caused to slope toward the south, leaving the south line of said walk about six inches below the line of its original plane of construction, making it dangerous for persons to walk thereon, and especially so in inclement or wet weather.
“That the city of St. Joseph, at said date, and for a long time prior thereto, carelessly and negligently maintained said walk in the condition aforesaid, and carelessly and negligently permitted the same to he and remain in the aforesaid defective condition upon said street as a public sidewalk and thoroughfare; that the dangers aforesaid were greatly increased whenever rains would fall upon said walk, making it slippery and difficult to stand on, or walk upon, and that all of the foregoing facts were well known to the defendant, or could have been so known to it by the exercise of ordinary care.”
The notice given the city by plaintiff states with reference to the place that the injury occurred while plaintiff was “walking along and upon the hoard and wooden sidewalk on the north side of Hammond street and between Lookout street on the east and Swift avenue on the west and being in the west half of said block.
“That said sidewalk was carelessly and negligently constructed upon a steep incline or hillside sloping to-
“That while walking westward on said sidewalk in the west half of said block on said 28th day of August, 1907, I was by and on account of sloping, slanting and defective condition aforesáid of said walk, caused to slip, to fall.”
We think the description of the place of the injury sufficient. The prime object of the statute (section 5724, R. S. 1899), requiring the giving of notice in cases of this character is to protect the city against fraudulent or stale demands. The city must be informed of the time, place, and circumstances of the injury in order that from the facts stated in the notice its officers may accurately investigate the merits of the claim. If the notice were so vague and indefinite in any of the particulars made essential by the statute as to be misleading, we would not hesitate in declaring it bad. A claimant will not be permitted to thwart the intent of the statute by untruthfulness or indefiniteness when the true facts may be clearly stated. But the statute should be construed reasonably. Its design is to defeat unjust demands, not to lay pitfalls in the way of honest
We have examined the cases cited by defendant (Butts v. Town of Stowe, 53 Vt. 600; Dalton v. City of Salem, 139 Mass. 91; Cronan v. City of Boston, 135 Mass. 110), and find them to differ in essential facts from the case in hand, but if they did not, we would not permit them to control our decision, since a rule more harsh on the claimant than that we have declared would impress us as being too unjust for adoption into the jurisprudence of this State.
The views expressed are in harmony with prior adjudications of the Supreme Court and of this court. [Reno v. City, 169 Mo. 642; Lyons v. City, 112 Mo. App. 681; Canter v. City, 126 Mo. App. 629.]
We do not agree with defendant in its contention
Nor do we sanction the argument that we should declare as a matter of law that negligence of the plaintiff contributed to the production of the injury. The issue of contributory negligence was one of fact for the jury to solve. This is not a case like that considered by the Supreme Court in Cohn v. City, 108 Mo. 387, where the plaintiff deliberately or negligently chose the most dangerous of two or more convenient ways. By implication, defendant invited plaintiff to use the sidewalk in front of her home and under the circumstances before us, we think it is for the jury to say whether or not she was justified in using it. She knew the way was more dangerous than it would have been had it been kept in reasonable repair, but we cannot declare in law that it was so glaringly and imminently dangerous that a reasonably prudent person in the situation of plaintiff would have refused to encounter the danger. There was no other convenient way for her to take. To go into the street, she would have had to cross a deep gully and in so doing would have encountered a risk perhaps as great as that she faced, and because of the rain of the preceding night, it is fair
The judgment is affirmed.