89 Mo. App. 121 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
This is a suit for personal injury claimed to have been received by reason of an alleged defective sidewalk of the defendant.
It is alleged, as plaintiff’s basis for recovery, that the defendant, a city of the third class, permitted its sidewalk on Ingram avenue, a thoroughfare for public travel, to become and remain in a dangerous condition and unsafe for persons passing over it; that certain of the boards or planks composing said sidewalk were rotten and weak, that others had broken away and had been removed, leaving two separate holes near together in said portion of said sidewalk, where the injury complained of occurred, at a point about thirty feet south of the sidewalk along the south side of Broadway, of which defects the defendant had notice; that on the fourteenth day of May, 1899, about dark, or just before dark, while plaintiff was walking on said portion of said sidewalk he fell into said holes without negligence ón his part and was seriously injured; that said fall was caused by reason of the holes aforesaid and by the rotten condition of a board adjacent to said holes in said sidewalk; and that his injuries are permanent. He asked judgment for $3,000. The answer is a general denial of the allegations of the petition and charges contributory negligence.
The principal contentions of the appellant are: Eirst, that the court erred in giving instruction number five on behalf of
The error on account of the giving of instruction number five consists, it is contended, in charging the jury that the law presumed that the plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care when he received the injury, while there was alóundant evidence tending to show contributory negligence. The decision of this point involves an examination of the evidence. The plaintiff in his testimony, amongst other things, states: “T was at the Broadway crossing going home, it was just getting dark when I started home, or about so, and went down on Ingram avenue and turned south to go home, and I knew those holes were there, and I was walking carefully along, watching, as I always did, and when I came to the first hole, I stepped across on to a board and it gave way and I aimed to catch myself, and there was a hole about ten inches wide in front of that, and this foot, my left foot, went right under, right under the board; the board struck me right on the shin * * * and my foot slipped and I fell right backwards, and there was a sharp edged rock about eighteen inches long, and came up a little above the stringers, it is a little above, and just throwed me right back on that,” etc. Miss Annie Settles, who saw the plaintiff at the time of the accident, testified:
In Stevens v. Walpole, 76 Mo. App. 213, it was held: that, “mere knowledge of a defect in a sidewalk will not, as a matter of law, bar a recovery by the injured party, but such question should go to the jury to determine whether the defect was so patent and threatening that a prudent person would not take the chances of using the sidewalk.” In Moberly v. Railroad, 98 Mo. 183, it was held: “The presumption that every one exercises ordinary care, obtains, in the absence of evidence to the contrary. But in an action again'st a railroad company for damages for personal injury, where there was abundant evidence from which plaintiff’s negligence might have 'been found, an instruction that the presumption or ordinary care existed in his favor was calculated to mislead the jury and should not have been given.” There are many cases in the Supreme Court of the State to the same effect, viz: Ganey v. St. Louis, 141 Mo. 180; Barr v. Kansas City, 105 Mo. 550; Rapp v. Railroad, 106 Mo. 423; Myers v. City of Kansas, 108 Mo. 480; Bluedorn v. Railway, 121 Mo. 258; Schepers v. Railway, 126 Mo. 665.
It will be seen by reference to these authorities that it
While it is true that instruction number five is perhaps technically wrong in telling the jury, in view of all the facts that the presumption was that plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care when he was injured, we can not see how the defendant was prejudiced thereby in view of the rule last above, quoted, as there was no evidence tending to show want of care upon the part of plaintiff; and the mere fact of his knowledge of the defect in the sidewalk could not defeat his right of re
It is the duty of the appellate courts to disregard all harmless errors that inadvertently get into nearly every case during the trial. A reversible error is one that materially affects the merits of the action. R. S. 1899, sec.865; Haniford v. Kansas City, 103 Mo. 172; Berkson v. Cable Co., 144 Mo. 211.
The second contention is that the plaintiff’s instruction defining reasonable care was erroneous in defining it as “such care as a reasonable and prudent person would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances.” This form of instruction has been approved in the following cases: Prewitt v. Eddy, 115 Mo. 283; De Weese v. Iron Co., 54 Mo. App. 476; s. c. 128 Mo. 423; Lower v. City of Sedalia, 77 Mo. 431; Chitty v. Railroad Co., 148 Mo. 64.
And that the instruction of plaintiff used the word “stum
Objection to plaintiff’s instructions numbered five, six and seven are not well taken. They are in harmony with the others, and they do not assume any facts that are not practically uncontroverted. That the plaintiff fell and was injured to some extent, and that there were defects in the sidewalk in question, was not controverted; therefore, as a matter of course, the instructions assumed no controverted facts.
Failing to find prejudicial error in the case, it is affirmed.