3 Mo. App. 275 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action grounded on the alleged negligence of the defendants in removing the dirt and natural support of a house, a part of which was held by the plaintiff under lease; that the house gave way and sank, the plaintiff’s rooms became untenantable, and his furniture in the rooms damaged. The plaintiff was nonsuited, and whether he was properly nonsuited depends on the correspondence between the allegations of his petition and the evidence adduced to support them. The petition alleges that the plaintiff was carrying on the business of renting the rooms ; that the defendants, who were engaged in making a tunnel, made excavations-near the premises, and carelessly and negligently removed the dirt and natural support of the house, thereby causing
It will be seen that the petition neither pleads facts to show, nor by any averment charges, that the acts of the defendants in excavating and in removing the soil were, in themselves, wrongful acts. On the contrary, as a pleading must be construed against the pleader, the petition admits that the acts, as such, were lawful; otherwise, it is to be presumed the pleader would have charged facts showing that the acts were unlawful. The gravamen of the complaint is that these lawful acts were negligently done; that ' owing to the careless or unskillful manner in which the defendants or their employees performed these acts, and not owing to other causes, the plaintiff’s property was injured. Hence, the ¡Joint of the appellant that the court below erred in presuming a license is not well taken. The fact that the answers plead a license cannot avail to amend the plaintiff’s petition.
As the petition thus, in effect, charges a want of care or skill on the part of the defendants, or their employees, in
The plaintiff complains of the refusal of the court to allow certain evidence to go to the jury: first, certain admissions, and then certain evidence as to damages. But none of the evidence excluded would have supplied the deficiencies in plaintiff’s case, as none of it tended to prove negligent acts or omissions of the defendants, by which the injury was done to plaintiff’s property. It appears from all the evidence adduced or offered that the damage might have resulted consistently with due care and skill on the part of the defendants in making the excavations.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.