Bender v. Weber
Bender v. Weber
Opinion of the Court
Referring to. the facts stated by our learned associate, the Presiding Judge, in the opinion tendered by him for adoption by the court: I find myself wholly unable to concur in the conclusions of law pronounced upon these facts. The view I have taken of this case and the doctrine of the opinion tendered may be properly presented in a memorandum as follows:
I am persuaded that it was proper to send the case 'to the jury. The girl testified that while she knew the areaway was there, she had not noticed it was so close to the door, and it was not such a place as a person of ordinary prudence would not go near. The opinion holds that the plaintiff should be declared guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law for the reason the girl knew of the areaway. Now the mere fact of knowledge touching a danger of this kind is not .of itself sufficient to operate negligence as a matter of law. This idea runs through all the decided cases in this State, as I understand them. Indeed, it has been expressly decided in a case where a lady walked off an embankment and it appeared she was familiar therewith. It is said in that case that the mere fact a person had previous knowledge of a defect or hole in the ground is not conclusive evidence of negligence if she afterwards walked into the same. The fact should be submitted to the jury with the other evidence, for them to ascertain whether the party exercised that degree of care which would be exercised by an ordinarily prudent person under the circumstanced. [See Smith v. St. Joseph, 45 Mo. 449.]
And this too is the doctrine of the case of Buesch
Since writing the foregoing memorandum, Judge Goode has directed me to note him as concurring in the view therein expressed, and suggested that it be filed as the opinion of the court.
As to the other arguments in the brief, it is sufficient to say that we have examined the questions presented and do not find sufficient error in the record to warrant a reversal. In this connection, we invite attention to our statute (sec. 865, R. S. 1899, sec. 865, Mo. Ann. St. 1906), providing as follows: “The Supreme Court, or courts of appeals, shall not reverse the judgment of any court, unless it shall believe that error was committed by such court against the appellant or plaintiff in error, and materially affecting the merits of the action.” Judge Goode concurring, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judge Reynolds is of the opinion the decision is in conflict with the opinion of the Supreme Court in Buesching v. St. Louis Gas Light Co., 73 Mo. 219. It is therefore ordered that the cause be transferred to that court for final determination.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting (after stating the facts). — Probably the case nearest in line with this, so far as the principle of law controlling cases of this kind is concerned, is the case of Buesching v. The St. Louis
In the Buesching case the cellarway was an open space on the street, without any protection whatever around it or on either side. In the case at bar the area was open only at one end, and that open end not toward the alleyway, but on the side of the wall, the roadway, passage or space six feet and three inches wide between its rail and the opposite wall, so that persons passing up and down the alleyway were in no 'danger whatever of falling into this open space. To get into or fall into this area, one would have to go out of their way, unless coming out of or going into the store. It was not on the line of travel of persons coming in from the Cardinal avenue entrance, and would not even be on the line of travel of those coming out of the doorway of the grocery unless they turned toward it, instead of going straight out into the alleyway. That is to say, it was not on the usual path of passage or travel through the alleyway. Therefore, in this respect it differs radically in position from the open area in the Buesching Case. After stating the facts in evidence, Judge Hough continues: “In passing on a demurrer to the evidence, the court is required to make every inference of fact in favor of the party offering the evidence, which a jury might, with any degree of propriety, have inferred in his favor, and if, when received in this light, it is insufficient to support a verdict in his favor, the demurrer should be sustained. [Wilson v. Board of Education, 63 Mo. 137.] But the court is not at liberty,
Applying this to the case at bar and drawing the inferences and conclusions from it, which are so plainly deducible and unmistakably follow, we have in the case at bar the very facts, by uncontradicted evidence, that were absent in the Buesching Case, and which facts, if present in the Buesching Case would have resulted in withdrawing the case from the jury. In the case at bar, the plaintiff herself admits that she knew of the cellarway, or area; she knew that it was unprotected; she had gone past it hardly an instant before, gone over by exactly the same route and, unmindful of the proximity of the opening, she has walked or backed into it, her only explanation being that she had not realized that it was so near. This will not do, and if I understand the law announced in the Buesching Case would have warranted, even compelled, the trial judge to have taken the case from the jury. Plaintiff should not be allowed to shift on to the defendants the responsibility for her carelessness.
Smith et al. v. City of St. Joseph, 45 Mo. 449, is relied on by my learned associates as particularly in point in support of the view they take of this case. Reading that case will show that the facts in it are in no manner analogous to those in the case at bar. In that case, plaintiff with knowledge of the existence of the excavation, tried to avoid; in this case, plaintiff with
That reasoning, I respectfully submit, destroys and is directly contrary to the rule announced by the Supreme Court, through Judge Hough, in the Buesching Case. To put it briefly, there was no evidence in the Buesching Case, that Buesching knew of the presence of the open area; that knowledge had to be presumed; there was no evidence as to how he fell into the area; that had to be presumed. The court held that if the positive and uncontradicted facts showed knowledge of the dangerous opening and that by his own negligence or carelessness Buesching was killed, the case should have been taken from the jury. But if knowledge and acts amounting to carelessness had to be presumed from the mere fact of the fall, then carelessness could not be presumed because the facts on which it might be predicated, rested on mere presumption and not on evidence. My contention therefore is that my learned associates, in allowing the verdict of the jury to stand in this case, and in holding that the case should not have been taken from the jury, have disregarded the principle underlying all the cases, and taking the law to be as stated by Judge Hough in the
While recognizing as the law, that it is the province of the jury to pass on the evidence and that their ver-, diet is usually binding on the courts, there is the grave and ever present obligation resting on the trial as well as appellate courts, to determine whether. the case should go to the jury at all.
Moreover, it is the duty of the appellate as well as of the trial court to see to it that in and by their verdict, the jury have followed the direction of the trial judge, and are supported in or have evidence before them warranting the verdict. In this case, I am so clearly of opinion that the jury not only had no evidence warranting their verdict, but that they disregarded the instructions as to contributory negligence of plaintiff barring her recovery, that I do not think it should be permitted to stand. The jury were told that if they-believed from the evidence, “that the plain
There was no dispute, no contradictory testimony, over the fact that plaintiff knew of this opening; that she backed or stepped into it, not remembering or realizing, as she says, that it was so close to the door. Her own testimony, to my mind, proves that she came within these two instructions, and should not recover. That being so, I am clearly of opinion not only that the law as announced by Judge Hough in the BueSching Case comes into play, and that the court, in refusing to take the case from the jury, acted in disregard of that rule of law and that in affirming this judgment we are in direct conflict with it, but also that the verdict is contrary to the instructions given, and should have been set aside for that, if for no other reason. ■
Furthermore, as going to the absolute justice of the case, we should not overlook the fact that plaintiff was where she had no business to be on the evening of the accident. It was Sunday evening, about dusk; the store was closed, as it should have been. Two or three people were sitting inside talking. Plaintiff insisted on being admitted, to buy oysters, she says, but when she got in she forgot what she was sent for and
Nor is there any proof that defendants had any occasion to consider the open area dangerous. They were landlords, not tenants in possession, and that they should be mulcted in heavy damages under the facts in this case, seems to me very unjust. They have every right to. demand that plaintiff should prove herself free from careless negligence before they are called upon to respond.
Another proposition in the case, in my opinion, calls for reversal.
There were certain photographs in evidence, showing the area and alleyway. Admittedly they were taken after the accident. On one of them hinges, as of a gate, appeared on the post at the side or open end of the area. It was conceded at the trial that no gate had ever been across this end prior to the accident. The court in an instruction, told the jury that they should disregard all evidence, if any, of. any gate having been placed on the stairway — that evidence of repairs or alterations made after the accident, is not competent evidence of any negligence on the part of defendants.
In the face of this, counsel for plaintiff, in his closing address to the jury, with the photograph in his hands, said: “Are there — in this picture, sworn to, brought here by them — are there or are there not hinges on that upright there? Don’t you see there are?” Counsel for defendant checked counsel for plaintiff and, calling the court’s attention to the remark, asked the court to check and correct counsel, whereupon the court said: “The court declines to correct counsel in his argument with reference to the photograph.” Exception was duly saved. I think this reversible error.
On the whole case, I think the judgment should be reversed, without a remander of the case, on the refusal of the court to take the case from the jury, and that my learned brothers, in holding to the contrary are in
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.