26 Mo. App. 181 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff, a corporation, and the owner of a lot situated on the corner of Broadway and Market streets in the city of St. Lonis, complains of the defendants, who were contractors for reconstructing the street fronting the plaintiff’s premises, of so negligently piling granite blocks on certain flagging stones of the sidewalk, as to crack and otherwise injure them, to the plaintiff ’ s damage, in the sum of $464.10.
The defendant’s answer avers, in substance, that the locus in quo is a part- of a street of the city of St. Louis, duly dedicated; that the plaintiff, and those under whom the plaintiff claims, had made an excavation under the public sidewalk of said street, without lawful authority from the city, and failed to provide sufficient support for the flagging covering it, for the lawful uses of said street; that the defendants were contractors with the city for reconstructing the street with granite blocks; that their contract with the city provided, among other things, 'the following:
“ On the day designated by the street commissioner for the commencement of said work, at any point or points, on the line thereof, the contractors shall, before disturbing or making any alteration in the present roadway, haul upon the line of the work, at each of said points, a sufficient quantity of stone blocks for the paving of at least the space between any two intersecting streets. * * * The contractor will * * * be required to pile such stones as may have been approved, neatly on the front of the sidewalk, and not within three feet of any fire hydrant, and in such manner as will preserve a sufficient passageway on the line of the sidewalks, and, also, permit of free access from the roadway to each house on the line of the street. After this inspection has been made, and after all the rejected stones have been removed entirely from the line of the work, and the accepted stones piled in the manner aforesaid, and not*184 until eacli of these conditions shall have been faithfully fulfilled, will the contractor be permitted to proceed with the preparation of the roadway, for the new pavement.”
The defendants further aver that the use of the street and sidewalk mentioned in the foregoing provision of the contract, was a lawful use thereof by the city, and. the defendants, under the city; that they pursued it strictly, and with care ; that they had no notice of the insufficient support of said sidewalk flagging-, while the plaintiff had notice of the beginning of the work, under the defendants’ contract with the city; that if any injury was caused to the plaintiff, it was due and owing to the fact that the flagging was insufficient to support the rock, which might be, and was, lawfully piled upon it, in the necessary and lawful use of the street, and not to any negligence on the defendants’ part in piling said rock.
The plaintiff, in its reply, denies that the granite blocks, mentioned in the answer, were properly piled and distributed on the sidewalk, and asserts that an undue proportion of the blocks was placed on the plaintiff’s sidewalk, and that the same were negligently cast and thrown there by the defendants with great force and violence, and denies that they were piled there, either by the direction of the street commissioner, or in obedience to the provisions of the contract.
The plaintiff, also, denies that the piling of said ■blocks upon said sidewalk, in said manner, was a lawful use of said sidewalk, and asserts that the defendants had full notice of the existence of the vault under the sidewalk, and of the manner in which the vault was arched, and of the manner in which said sidewalk was supported, and of the weight which said sidewalk could bear, and the plaintiff asserts that said sidewalk had sufficient support for all the lawful uses thereof.
The trial was had before the court, sitting as a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendants appeal.
In the case of Julia Building Association v. Bell Telephone Company (88 Mo. 267), Judge Norton, in delivering the opinion of the majority of the court, says : “Where one claims land as being part of a street adjoining the premises described in his deed, he can not, also, insist that the land is not subject to a servitude as such street. It is only by assuming that it is a street, that he acquires any title to the land thereon, and, being-part of a street, his title is subject to the easement over It.” It was, in that case, accordingly held, that, where one, being the owner of the fee of the street, lawfully excavates the space under the sidewalk, and builds retaining walls under it for the purpose of protecting Ms vaults, the city may subject the space thus occupied by him, within the boundaries of the street, to other purposes’ of a highway, without compensation, even if, by so doing, it materially injures his retaining walls, the court, per Norton, J., saying: “The stone wall, in question, erected by the plaintiff to supply the place of the earth removed, sustains the same relation to the street, and the right of the public to'use it, that the earth itself would have sustained had it never been removed.”
The testimony adduced by the plaintiff tended to show that the vault underneath the sidewalk was used for a boiler room, which fact was made manifest to passers by, by the fact .that the flagging in winter was
The testimony further tended to show, that the flagging stones were of usual dimensions, about eight inches thick and fifteen feet long; that they rested securely on either end, but had no center or cross-supports ; that this is a usual way for constructing such sidewalks, and such construction is deemed sufficiently strong for all the ordinary uses of the walk ; that the plaintiff had no notice of the quantity of rock the defendants intended to pile upon the walk, but, when the defendants had piled a certain quantity, notified men in their employ that the flagging would not be strong enough to support it; that, shortly afterwards, it was ascertained that one or more of the flag stones was cracked, whereupon the defendants removed part of the blocks, stored on the sidewalk, to the opposite side of the street.
There was, also, some evidence tending to show that the men, in unloading the blocks, at times, threw them violently from the wagon on the flagging, and that the amount of granite blocks piled on the sidewalk was greater than that piled on the portions of the sidewalk on either side of the street, between Market and Walnut streets, where the property is situated.
The defendants gave evidence tending to show that no more, and, if anything, less, than the proper quota of the granite blocks were piled on this sidewalk, and that they were piled in a usual and careful manner ; that the defendants had no notice of any danger to the se
The court, upon the plaintiff’s request, charged the jury as follows:
“2. If the court finds that the title of the city of St. Louis to that portion of Broadway, opposite the premises described in the petition, and adjoining the same,, is derived from the dedication of August Chouteau, read in evidence; and if it further finds- that the plaintiff is owner in fee of the property described in the petition, and holds the same by a title derived by deeds from the said Chouteau, then the plaintiff had a right to excavate under the said sidewalk in such manner as it saw fit, provided, however, it left a good and-sufficient covering or arch over the said excavation, - secure and useful for all purposes of a street or pavement, and provided, that the said excavation did not in any manner interfere with the use 'by the public of the said street and sidewalk j and if the court finds that, after making the said excavation, the plaintiff did cover the same securely, and in the manner hereinbefore specified, at its own expense, and that the same, at the dates mentioned in the petition, was secured, and was sufficient for all public uses, and jthat the defendants piled granite blocks upon the said archway covering negligently, and unskillfully, and carelessly, and in such quantities; and with such violence,, as to break and destroy the aforesaid sidewalk or vault covering; and if the court further finds that, thereafter,, the plaintiff repaired the same at its own expense and restored it to the condition in which it was before it was-*188 broken, then the finding and judgment will be for the plaintiff in such sum as the court may find, from the evidence, the said repairs were reasonably worth, and against the defendants, Allen and Yieths.”
And gave the following declarations of law at the request of the defendants, in substance:
1. That if no more paving blocks were piled on the sidewalk in front of the plaintiff’s premises than its proportionate share of the quantity necessary for the work between Market and Walnut streets, then the plaintiff can not recover, even if certain stones composing the covering of the excavation adjoining their premises were broken by reason of the said paving blocks being put there, provided the court finds they were broken by the mere pressure of the weight of the said blocks, and not by the manner of casting and putting them on the .sidewalk.'
2. If the plaintiff, through its business manager, Mr. Hoeffer, knew that granite paving blocks were .about to be piled on the sidewalk in front of their premises, to be used in reconstructing Broadway, and, that the sidewalk covering was not sufficiently strong to .support the weight of the blocks, and if the court finds, that, by reasonable exertion and at a trifling expense, the plaintiff could have propped up the covering underneath and prevented the alleged damage, and that it did not do so, then the judgment must be for the defendants.
The complaint made by the defendants is, that there was no substantial evidence to support the plaintiff’s instruction, and that, under the evidence offered, and the instructions given on behalf of the defendants, the verdict should have been for the defendants as a mere -conclusion of law.
That the evidence preponderates in favor of the defendants may readily be conceded ; that, however, of itself, will not warrant us to disturb the verdict. There is, unquestionably, some evidence that the breaking of
It is, unquestionably, true, that if the plaintiff' could have prevented the injury at a trifling expense, and by reasonable exertion,, it was its duty to do so, no matter, who was originally in fault. Stewart v. City of Clinton, 79 Mo. 614; Munkres v. Railroad, 72 Mo. 514. And the court properly thus declared the law. But it does not follow that, under the evidence, the-plaintiff is precluded from recovering on that ground. It nowhere appears that it was informed, nor does it conclusively appear that it had reason to know, the quantity of blocks, and their weight, which the defendants intended to pile upon the flagging, or that it' had any reason to suppose that the flagging would not bear its proportion; nor does it conclusively appear that the flagging was .not made to bear more than its proper proportion of the weight. Before the plaintiff can be debarred from recovery on that ground, as a matter of law, its conduct must have been such as would debar it on the ground of contributory negligence ; that is, its contributory negligence must be an unavoidable inference from the testimony. Such was not the case in this instance.
As the law declared by the court was proper, and
The judgment is affirmed.