Case Name: ALBERT J. DAVOREN et ux. v. KANSAS CITY, Appellant
Court: Supreme Court of Missouri
Jurisdiction: Missouri
Decision Date: 1925-05-23
Citations: 308 Mo. 513
Docket Number: 
Parties: ALBERT J. DAVOREN et ux. v. KANSAS CITY, Appellant.
Judges: Walker, White and Ragland, JJ., concur; Graves, G. J., and David E. Blair and Atwood, JJ., dissent, on the ground that there is no liability; Graves, C. J., in an opinion filed, in the result of which Atwood, J., concurs.
Reporter: Missouri Reports
Volume: 308
Pages: 513–538

Head Matter:
ALBERT J. DAVOREN et ux. v. KANSAS CITY, Appellant.
In Banc,
May 23, 1925.
I. NEGLIGENCE: Nuisance: Pond on Private Property: Caused by Construction of Street: Drowning of Children: Liability of City. A city which, in improving a street in a thickly inhabited district, makes a fill therein across an intersecting ravine, thereby creating a pond, on private property, two hundred feet long and wide, varying in depth from a few inches at the edges to fourteen feet at the center, thereby creates a nuisance, and having permitted such nuisance to continue for a long number of years is liable in damages to the parents of small children who, attracted by ice on the pond to play thereon, are drowned when the ice breaks under their weight. It is common knowledge that large ponds in the midst of a great city are highly attractive to children, both for purposes of bathing and skating, and the law does not permit the city to create and maintain for years such a nuisance, or having created it persistently to neglect to abate it by the construction of adequate culverts or drains through the dam to afford an outlet to the accumulated surface water in the pond; and to permit the city to escape the payment of damages for the death of children resulting from such obvious- neglect of its duty, on the sole ground that the pond was located on private property and the children’s death did not result from use of the street, would be unreasonable and a denial of the fundamental principles of justice.
Held, by GRAVES, C. J., dissenting, ATWOOD, J., concurring in the result, that the city had the legal right to construct an embankment in the street of sufficient height to protect it from surface water, and it was not negligence to do what it had a legal right to do; that in changing the grade of the street the city was liable in damages for whatever injury was thereby done to abutting private property, but it was guilty of no a.ct of negligence in protecting the street from the surface water accumulated by the ravine, nor in failing to provide drains through the fill or dam as an outlet for such surface water; .and as the only negligence charged is the construction and maintenance of the fill and failure to provide outlets for the water, there can be no recovery.
Held, also, that the case, both by the allegations and the instructions, is grounded on the principle of the turn-table cases, and the facts do not bring it within the rule of those cases, and the demurrer should have been sustained.
2. TRESPASSERS: Children at Play on Pond. Children who habitually gather for play on the ice of a large pond on private property in the midst of a great city, which, having been created by the construction by the city of a deep fill or high dam across a ravine intersecting a street, has been permitted to continue for nineteen years, are not to be considered as trespassers, but as licensees, in a suit against the city for damages brought by parents whose children were drowned when the ice on which they were playing gave way under their weight.
3. NEGLIGENCE: Nuisance: Abatement: Dam in Street: Drowning of Children on Private Property: Surface Water. It is no defense to the action against the city for damages that the pond, in which plaintiff’s children were drowned while at play upon the ice, was located upon private property, where the city constructed in the street the dam which created the pond, and an outlet for the waters could have been inexpensively provided by the construction of a drain or culvert through the dam, and thereby the nuisance abated.
Held, by GRAVES, C. J., that the city is not guilty of negligence in making a fill in-its street, where it is intersected by a natural ravine, for the purpose of protecting the street from surface water; and if such fill causes a pond to form upon the abutting private property, it is no more liable in damages to parents whose child was drowned while at play upon the thin ice of the pond, than would be the owners of the private property had they created the pond by constructing a dam further up the ravine. All persons have a legal right to protect their lands from surface water, and are under no legal obligation to provide drains as outlets.
4. EXCESSIVE VERDICT: For Death of Child: Ten Thousand Dollars. A verdict for ten thousand dollars as the amount of damages sustained by parents when their child, six years and seven months old, was negligently permitted by the city to be drowned in a pond created and permitted to be unreasonably maintained by the city, is too large by five thousand dollars.
Citations to Headnotes: Headnote 1: Municipal Corporations, 2$ Cyc. p. 1293; Negligence, 29 Cyc. p. 464. Headnote 2: Negligence, 29 Cyc. p. 457. Headnote 3: Municipal Corporations, 28 Cyc. p. 1383. Headnote 4: Damages, 17 C. J. sec. 235.
Appeal .from Jackson Circuit Court. — Hon. James H. Austin, Judge.
Affirmed (upon condition).
John B. Pew, Solon T. Gilmore and Ilus M. Lee for appellant.
(1) The court erred in overruling the demurrer offered by the defendant at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, because: The pond was located wholly upon private property; the accident did not result from, any use of a street, and under all the facts there was no duty owing the deceased, and hence no liability upon the part of the defendant. Arnold v. St. Louis, 152 Mo. 173; Overholt v. Yieths, 93 Mo. 422; Moran v. Pullman Co., 134 Mo. 641; Kelly v. Benas, 271 Mo. 1; Hight v. Bakery Co., 168 Mo. App. 431; Buddy v. Terminal Ry. Co., 276 Mo. 276; State ex rel. v. Ellison, 281 Mo. 667; Rallo v. Const. Co., 291 Mo. 221; Omaha v: Bowman, 52 Neb. 293; Murphy v. Brooklyn, 23 N. E. 887; Peters v. Bowman, 47 Pac. 113; Tavis v. Kansas City, 80 Kan. 547; Hooper v. Topeka, 92 Kan. 11; Gillespie v. McGowan, 100 Pa. St. 144; Klix v. Nieman, 68 Wis. 271. (2) The court erred in the giving of plaintiffs’ main instruction in that the instruction submitted the “attractive nuisance” or “turn-table” doctrine to the jury. Barnett v. Kansas City, 214 S. W. (Mo. App.) 240; State ex rel. Kansas City v. Ellison, 281 Mo. 667; Hight v. Bakery Co., 168 Mo. App. 431; O’Hara v. Gas Light Co., 244 Mo. 395; Smith v. Dold Packing Co., 82 Mo. App. 9; Overholt v. Veiths, 93 Mo. 422; Barney v. Railroad, 126 Mo. 372; Moran v. Pullman Car Co., 134 Mo. 641; Arnold v. St, Louis, 152 Mo. 173; Kelly v. Benas, 217 Mo. 1; Buddy v. Terminal Ry. Co., 276 Mo. 276; Rallo v. Heman Const. Co., 291 Mo. 221. (3) The verdict is 'excessive. Dug-dale v. Ry. Co., 195 Mo. App. 258.
Hogsett & Boyle for respondents. ,
(1) This case was not founded upon the “turntable doctrine” but upon a wholly different theory of liability. The petition alleges facts showing that the pond was a dangerous nuisance created by defendant’s negligence, and that defendant should have anticipated injury therefrom, and that the death of the child directly resulted therefrom. These facts create a cause of action. Oapp v. St. Louis, 251 Mo. 345; Benton v. St. Louis, 217 Mo. 694; Benton v. St. Louis, 248 Mo. 110.; Jensen v. Kansas City, 181 Mo. App. 359; City of Elwood v. Addison, 26 Ind. App. 28; Omaha v. Richards, 49 Neb. 244; Omaha v. Bowman, 59 Neb. 84; City of Indianapolis v. Williams, 58 Ind. App. 447; Kansas City v. Siese, 71 Kan. 283; Williams v. Gas & Elec. Co., 274 Mo. 12; Godfrey v. Kansas City L. & P. Co., 253 S. W. 236. The mere fact that the petition alleged, in addition to the foregoing facts that the condition was “attractive to children,” did not destroy the cause of action. Godfrey v. L. & P. Co., 253 S. W. 239; Capp v. St. Louis, 251 Mo. 352; Jensen v. Kansas City, 181 Mo. App. 359; Williams v. Gas & )Elec. Co., 274 Mo. 11; Day v. Ice Co., 136 Mo. App. 280; City v. Addison, 26 Ind, App. 28. Tlie “attractive to children” allegation may be eliminated from the petition as surplusage. Callicotte v. Rock Island Ry. Co., 274 Mo. 693; Wolfe v. Payne, 241 S. W. 919; Wessel v. Lavender, 262 Mo. 430; Rutledge v. Swinney, 261 Mo. 141; Bradley v. Becker, 296 Mo. 548; Wyler v. Rabican, 150 Mo. App. 479; Truel v. Ry. Co., 143 Mo. App. 380; Lampe v. Ry. Co., 209 Mo. App. 371; Morgan v. Zinc Co., 199 Mo. App. 26; Miniea v. Cooperage Co., 175 Mo. App. 91. The “turn-table doctrine” is never applicable unless the dangerous agency is upon promises owned or controlled by the defendant. O’Hara v. Gas Light Co., 244 Mo. 404; Godfrey v. L. & P. Co., 253 S. W. 238; Williams' v. Gas & Elec. Co., 274 Mo. 11; Capp v. St. Louis, 251 Mo. 353; Bay v. Ice Co., 136 Mo. App. 280; Ratliff v. Power Co., 203 S. W. 235 ; Beckwith v. City of Malden, 253 S. W. 18; Brady v. Traction Co., 253 S. W. 202; 20 R. C. L. p. 80; Kelly v. Benas, 217 Mo. 11. Pleadings should be liberally construed so as to distinguish between form and substance. Secs. 1257, 1291, R. S. 1919. (2) The principle of law permitting a landowner to defend his land against surface water cannot relieve the defendant of liability, (a) The rule has no application because the city was not protecting its street from surface water. Lincoln Railroad Co. v. Sutherland, 44 Neb. 526; Mc-Inery v. St. Joseph, 45- Mo. App. 296; Woods v. City of Kansas, 58 Mo. App. 279. (b) The right to protect against surface water is limited by the duty to exercise ordinary care in so doing, so that unnecessary damage may not result to others. Goettenetroeter v. Kappleman, 83 Mo. App. 294; Abbott v. Railway, 83 Mo. 281; Ryehlieki v. St. Louis, 98 Mo. 501; Cox v. Railway, 174 Mo. 606; ITosher v. Railway, 60 Mo. 333; Jones v. Ilannovan, 55 Mo. 466; Jones v. Railway, 84 Mo. 155.; Moss v. Railway, 85 Mo. 89; McCormick v. Railway, 57 Mo. 437; Clark v. Railway, 36 Mo. 224; Iloelscher'v. Railway, 182 S. W. 1080; Sandy v. City, 142 Mo. App. 330; Lewis v. City, 142 Mo. App. 84; Hannan v. City, 187 Mo. App. 315 ; Mclnery v. City, 45 Mo. App. 296; Car son v. City, 53 Mo. App. 289,; Torpey v. City, 24 Mo. App. 288 ; Beauchamp v. Taylor, 132 Mo. App. 92. In view of the fact that reasonable minds might differ upon the question whether the city used ordinary care in building an embankment without an adequate outlet, the question was one of fact for the jury. Power v. Ry. Co., 244 Mo. 31; ITuhn v. Ry. Co., 92 Mo. 450; Paden v. Van Blareom, 381. Mo. 128; Powers v. Transit Co., 202 Mo. 280. (c) It was not ordinary care for the city to dam up this ravine or natural drainway, which was th£ natural outlet for large quantities of surface water following rains and melting snows. Neither; the civil-law rule nor the common-law rule would permit the city to obstruct a natural drainway so as to dam, up surface water. Soules v. Railroad Co., 34 N. Dak. 7; Jungblum v. Railroad Co., 70 Minn. 153; Quinn v. Ry. Co., 120 N. W. 884; Wharton v. Stevens, 84 Iowa, 107; City of Waverly v. Page, 105- Iowa, 225; Tretter v. Ry. Co., 147 Iowa, 375,; Goettenetroeter v. Kappleman, 83- Mo. App-. 290; 3 F'arnham on Water & Water Rights, p. 2599; 2 Farnham on Water & Water Rights, p. 973; McClure v. City of Red Wing, 28 Minn. 186; Yan Pelt v. City of Davenport, 42 Iowa, 308; L. R. & Ft. Smith Railroad Co. v. Chatman, 39 Ark. 463; Ry. Co. v. Wallis, 82 Ark. 447; Ry. Co. v. Hardin, 87 A,rk. 475. (3) There is a vital distinction between the status of the defendant city, and the status of the landowner if he had been sued. The landowner could have defended on the ground that the boy was a trespasser ujpon his premises and took the premises as he found them; hut the city could not assert that defense. Godfrey v. L. & P. Co., 253 S. W. 239; Williams v. Gas. & Elec. Co., 274 Mo. 11; D’ay v. Ice Co., 136 Mo. App. 280; Ratliff v. Power Co., 203 S. W. 234. (4) The city having chosen to provide an outlet to drain away water, is liable for its negligence in failing to provide an adequate outlet. Kimbrough v. City, 201 S. W. 625'; Woods v. City of Kansas, 58 Mo. App. 278; Donahoe v. Kansas City, 136 Mo. 669; Barree v. City, 197 Mo. 389; Salmon v. Kansas City, 241 Mo. 53; Geiger v. St. Joseph, 198 S. "W. 7'8; City1 of Elwood v. Addison, 26 Ind. App. 28; Denver v. Rhodes, 9 Colo. ’561; City of Alton v. Hope, 68 111. 167; Brunswick v. Tucker, 103 Ga. 233; Ellis v. Iowa City, 29 Iowa, 229; Powers v. Council Bluffs, 50 Iowa, 197; Morley v. Buchanan, 124 Mich. 128; Harper v. Milwaukee, 30 Wis. 365; Gilmore v. Laconia, 55 N. IT. 130; Parker v. Nashua, 59 N. II. 402; Buchanan v. Duluth, 40 Minn. 402; City of Logansport v. Wright, 25 Ind. 512; 2 Earnham on Water & Water Rights, p. 1136.

Opinion:
WOODSON, J.
This was a suit instituted in the Circuit Court of Jackson County by the plaintiffs, husband and wife, against Kansas City, the defendant, for the alleged negligence in drowning their minor son, six years and seven months old. The ease was tried before the court and jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs for $10,000; and after moving unsuccessfully for a new trial the defendant duly appealed the case to this court.
The pleadings are unassailed and therefore it would be useless to notice them.
The facts of the case are simple, and practically undisputed. The name of the dead child for whose life the parents sued, was Karl Davoren, who had a twin brother' named Kenneth, who was also drowned at the same time and place that Karl lost his life. They came to their death by drowning- in a pond which was created by the city in constructing a high fill, or dam, across a ravine, for street purposes, on top of which a street was duly constructed. The city neglected to provide a culvert or other outlet sufficient to allow the surface water to escape that accumulated above said fill. Said pond of water was entirely upon private property, and was no! so closely located to a public street as to endanger the lives of the deceased' children by falling into it while passing along the street.
The pond was located on the south side of Twenty-first Street between Bales Avenue and Askew Street in Kansas City. Bales Avenue and Askew Street run north and south, and Twenty-first Street runs east and west, and crosses Bales and Askew. In the space between Bales and Askew the natural topography of the land is in the form of a ravine or draw, several blocks long, running in a northerly and southerly direction. The natural drainage of surface water through this ravine or draw was toward the north. The ravine began at Twenty-fifth or Twenty-sixth Street, which is four or five blocks south of Twenty-first Street, and. extended north to Eighteenth Street, making the ravine about eight blocks in length.' The ravine drained all of that territory lying between Twenty-sixth Street on the south, Bales Avenue on the west, Askew Street on the east, and Eighteenth Street on the north — a territory comprising eight square city blocks. Four or five of these square blocks lay south of Twenty-first Street.
In 1901 the defendant city constructed a high fill along and upon Twenty-first Street, directly across this ravine, like a dam. The height of the fill was about twelve to fourteen feet above the surface of the water at the time of the drowning. The length of the fill was about 150 feet from east to west.
Previous • to the construction of this fill there was no pond on the private property south of Twenty-first Street. Immediately after the city constructed this fill or dam, however, the surface water from the land to the south began damming up on account of the fill, and accumulating upon the private property south of the fill. The result was that a deep pond formed thereon, extending about 250- feet across at its widest point, measuring east and west, and about 200 feet north and south. The contour and appearance of the pond are shown by the diagram and by the photographs in evidence. The pond was right up against the embankment of the fill; that is, the embankment formed the north shore of the pond.
The defendant city apparently recognized its, duty not to dam np surface water on the abutting* property, for when it constructed the fill it put a pipe through the fill to drain off the surface water. But the pipe was too small and was wholly inadequate to drain away the water that accumulated. When the pond once formed it remained there as a" permanent thing* for the nineteen years preceding* the drowning* of plaintiffs' two boys. The pond remained there from 1901, when the fill was constructed, until March, 1920'. Nothing* was done by the defendant city to remedy the situation prior to the death of the boys.
The pond was fifteen feet deep in the middle. The surrounding neighborhood was a thickly populated residence district of the city. During all these years, it was a common practice for children in the neighborhood to play upon and about the pond, swimming in the pond in summer and playing on the ice in winter.
This dangerous condition was specifically reported to the City Engineer's office at the city hall by one of the neighbors fifteen or sixteen years before the drowning of plaintiffs' sons. The engineer's office promised that the matter would be attended to. It was impressed upon the engineer's office that it was an absolute necessity tol have the pond drained on account of the danger to children and on account of the foul smell. In addition, one of the neighbors notified a city policeman about the matter.
Nothing was ever done, however, by the city authorities to rectify the dangerous condition prior to the drowning here in question.
Plaintiffs' boys were drowned on March 8, 1920, while playing upon the ice of the pond. The two boys were six years and seven months old at the time of their death. They came home from school at about three o'clock in the afternoon, and after getting something* to eat and changing their clothes, went out to play, their mother at the time being engaged in preparing* the evening meal. About fifteen or twenty minutes later a neigh bor boy came and reported to the mother that her two little boys were drowned in the pond. The pond was not in sight of plaintiffs' residence and neither of the plaintiffs knew of the existence of the pond.
An eyewitness, Earl Cook, testified to the drowning of the boys. This witness was walking east along the south sidewalk of Twenty-first Street at the time. When he first saw the boys they were playing on the ice, throwing a bottle across the ice. One of the boys was running after it and the other one was running after him, possibly eight or ten feet behind. The first little fellow went through the ice about midway of the pond, and the other one was running so close to him he could not stop and ran in after him. The second little boy clung with his fingers to the edge of the broken ice for a short space. . In the meantime Cook immediately ran down the bank and ran in upon the ice, in the effort to rescue the boys. He got possibly half way from the bank to where the second little boy was clinging, when the ice broke and allowed Cook to go through. Both boys were drowned under his very' eyes, but he was helpless to rescue them,. The bodies of the boys were rescued from the water by the fire department by means of hooks and ropes.
The next day after the drowning, and two months before plaintiffs served any notice on the city of their intention to bring this suit, the city's claim department began taking numerous photographs of the pond. At the trial, however, the city made no attempt to excuse itself from the charg'e of negligence in creating this dangerous nuisance, and stood mute, offering* no evidence whatever.
At the close of all the evidence the appellant asked a demurrer to the respondents' evidence, which the court refused, and counsel for the former duly excepted.
I. Counsel for appellant insist that the trial court erred in refusing its demurrer offered to respondents' evidence at the close of their case for the reason stated, that the pond was located wholly upon private property and that the accident did not result from any use of a street, and under all the facts there was no duty owing the deceased, and hence no liability rested upon the appellant.
In support of that contention counsel for appellant cite the following cases: Arnold v. St. Louis, 152 Mo. 173; Overholt v. Vieths, 93 Mo. 422; Moran v. Pullman Car Co., 134 Mo. 641; Kelly v. Benas, 217 Mo. 1; Hight v. Bakery, 168 Mo. App. 431; Buddy v. Terminal Ry. Co., 276 Mo. 276; State ex rel. Kansas City v. Ellison, 281 Mo. 667; Rallo v. Heman Const. Co., 291 Mo. 221, 236 S. W. 632; City of Omaha v. Bowman, 53 Neb. 293, 72 N. W. 316; Reeder v. City of Omaha, 73 Neb. 845, 103 N. W. 672; Murphy v. City of Brooklyn, 23 N. E. (N. Y.) 887; Von Almen's Admr. v. City of Louisville, 202 S. W. Ky. 880; Peters v. Bowman, 47 Pac. (Cal.) 113; Tavis v. Kansas City, Kansas, 80 Kan. 547, 132 Pac. 185; Hooper v. City of Topeka, 92 Kan. 11, 139 Pac. 1018; Schouf's Admr. v. City of Paducah, 50 S. W. (Ky.) 42; Gillespie v. McGowan, 100 Pa. St. 144; Dehanitz v. City of St. Paul, 73 Minn. 385, 76 N. W. 48; Klix v. Nieman, 68 Wis. 271, 32 N. W. 223.
All of these cases proceed along the line that the appellant was not required to fence or otherwise protect nuisances or to secure dangerous places upon their private property from trespassers or other persons who might be thereon without the authority or permission of the respective owner thereof.
Generally speaking and as an abstract legal proposition those cases announce a correct legal proposition, but in my opinion they state the rule of law too broadly when applied to all cases, for the reason that there are often other facts and circumstances entering into the ease which qualify or limit that harsh and unfeeling rule.
For instance in the case of the City of Hannibal v. Richards, 82 Mo. l. c. 336, "the construction of the embankment on Second Street by the city was subsequent to defendant's purchase of the lots and that embank ment prevented the flow of the water from the lots and occasioned its accumulation upon them, which, it is alleged, injuriously affected the health of the city. It has been repeatedly held by this court, that the owners of the lots under such circumstances could not maintain an action against the city for the damage to them, but that such injury is damnum absque injuria. Now, we are asked to hold, also, that the city may create a nuisance upon the lot of an individual and then have it abated at his expense, if he refuse to do it when ordered. As well at once declare that no one can acquire any rights to town or city lots which the municipal corporation is bound to respect. The city cannot create a nuisance upon the property of a citizen and compel him to abate it" — citing the case of Weeks v. City of Milwaukee, 10 Wis. 269.
The first case by implication held that the city owed the duty to the citizens of Hannibal and to Richards to abate that nuisance. In the case of State ex rel. Lamm v. Sedalia, 241 S. W. 656, this court held that a private person specially injured by a public nuisance may sue to abate it, and it would naturally follow that he could recover any special damages sustained caused by such nuisance. The State may also compel a municipal corporation to- abate a nuisance. [State ex rel. Lamm v. Sedalia, supra.]
So in the case of Roth v. St. Joseph, 180 Mo. App. 381, the Kansas City Court of Appeals held that, where a city either by its own act or by permitting a railroad to erect an embankment in a street which creates, or suffers and permits, a stagnant pool to collect and become a nuisance near plaintiff's residence, the city is liable in damages, the same as any other person or landowner..
Likewise in the case of Salmon v. Kansas City, 241 Mo. l. c. 53, this court held that the city was liable for its contracts and torts in the prosecution of that work, and is open to suit in the same manner and to the same extent as a private person doing or causing to be done the same work, and cited: Donahoe v. Kansas City, 136 Mo. 665; Dolan v. Laclede Gas Co., 145 Mo. 550; Ely v. City of St. Louis, 181 Mo. 723; State ex rel. v. Gates, 190 Mo. l. c. 550; Barree v. Cape Girardeau, 197 Mo. l. c. 389; Broadwell v. City of Kansas, 75 Mo. 213; Worth v. City of Springfield, 78 Mo. 107; Wegmann v. City of Jefferson, 61 Mo. 55; Thurston v. City of St. Joseph, 51 Mo. 510.
II. Counsel for appellant insist that this ease wa.s brought and tried upon the theory of the turn-table eases- ^xi my opinion this is a clear misconception of the case. The turn-table cases turn •upon the theory that the defendants in such cases construct those dangerous devises upon their own premises, which are so attractive to children that they enter the premises and while playing on them they are injured thereby. Because of the attractions of the turntable, and the absence of any special danger appearing to the child, the injury is unexpectedly inflicted upon it, and out of this lure to the unsuspecting child arises the duty of the proprietors to so guard the tables that no injury can reasonably happen to it.
But that is not this case. Here the officers of the city and its agents should be reasonably charged with the knowledge of such facts as all other reasonably prudent men know, and that is that ponds of water in the thickly populated portions of large cities are attractive to children, and that is why they congregate there in summer for bathing in the waters, and in winter for skating on the ice formed thereon. It is common knowledge that ponds of water wherever located are highly attractive to children, both for skating and bathing purposes, as much so as the old creek down over the hill in the meadow we all read so much about, both in verse and fiction.
The same instinct and desire for pleasure induces the tourists of the country to resort to the seashore for bathing, and the more hardy to travel to the northern ice-fields for skating and tobagganing. The law imposes the duty upon the keepers of. our own resorts, as well as upon the keepers of the others, to make them reasonably safe for those who use them. In other words, all reasonably prudent persons must so use their property as not to unreasonably injure others, and if that duty is not exercised, then they are liable for its violation. In the case at bar the city unreasonably constructed the dam or fill across Twenty-first Street and thereby caused a large body of surface water to accumulate, covering some eight city blocks, right in the heart of the city, varying in depth from a few inches near the edges thereof, to twelve or fourteen feet in depth in the center, thereby making it a regular death trap for children. The only wonder is that there were not dozens of them drowned therein during the many years that it existed.
The legal obligation rests upon all who create or allow such dangerous conditions to use reasonable precautions to see that no unnecessary injury shall flow therefrom to others, and if that duty is violated and injury results the guilty party will be held liable in damages. _ > ;4
_ > This was the principle upon which the decision in Godfrey v. K. C. Light & Power Company, 299 Mo. 472, was based, and correctly so, if it had had any substantial facts upon which to rest. There the majority opinion held that a little crooked walnut tree was an attractive place for children to congregate, and therefore the company should have known that fact and have insulated its wires. To that part of the opinion I dissented and still dissent. I doubt that if there is a single man or woman who reads that opinion who ever saw children climbing such walnut trees out iii an open pasture, while with the ponds there is no one of common observation but who continually sees children flocking to the ponds of the country to swim or skate. On that account the wonder is that they have not been a more fruitful source of death and litigation, than they have been.
III. It is also insisted by counsel that the deceased children were trespassers at the time they lost their lives, and therefore the parents are barred from a recovery, in, this case. This point was decided against that contention in the Godfrey case, supra; but independent of that, I do not think that there was in fact any trespass whatever in this case, or anything that smacks of trespass. Common observation has long ago taught us that when a man or set of men turn out their lawn for public pasture or playgrounds, or flood it with water for swimming or skating purposes, it would be hard to say that those who-use it ar-c trespassers or can be held liable for such violation of the law. it is like the case of pedestrians walking along a railroad track in violation of the statute, and where there is no actual objection made thereto. This court and all others of the State have repeatedly held that the pedestrians become licensees and not trespassers. I think the same is true in this ease. The idea of these little iirnocent boys, hardly old enough to know what they were doing, being guilty of trespass, which would bar the parents' right of a recovery, when neither they nor the lot owners ever thought of such a thing, is shocking to the I~uman intelligence. [Williams v. Gas. Co., 274 Mo. 1; Day v. Ice Co., 136 Mo. App. l. c. 275; Beckwith v. City of Malden, 253 S. W. 17.]
The above cases lend color to the foregoing observations. Also, the case of Beckwith v. City of Malden, 253 S. W. 1, holds that the city must anticipate the proclivities of boys to climb trees.
IV. Counsel for appellant next insist that the city was not liable for the death of the boys because they were drowned on private property and therefore it had no power to abate the nuisance. In my opinion this insistence is untenable for the reason the re~ord shows that the fill or dam was constructed by the city within the limits of Twenty-first Street and flush up with the lateral lines thereof. Under that state of facts there was nothing to prevent the city from making a. (Iral n through or under the dam. By going upon the fill or dam and opening a culvert through it, the city could have thereby easily and inexpensively drained all the surface water from the pond, and that too, long before the boys were drowned.
. The authorities cited under Paragraph I of this opinion hold it to be the legal duty of a municipal corporation to abate such a nuisance as this one was and that it is liable in damages for all injury sustained in consequence thereof.
V. This case is in some respects like the case of Capp v. St. Louis, 251 Mo. 345. In that case there was a deep pool of water in a large creek or smallriver in Forest Park which had. been caused by the city emptying a storm sewer into the creek which dug out or excavated the hole in which the water accumulated; and while playing in the creek the child stepped into the deep pool and was drowned. In that case we held the pool was an attractive place for children and a public nuisance, and should have been abated by the city. The record showed the city was negligent in that regard, which negligence resulted in the death of the child, and it was therefore liable for the damages sustained by the child's parents.
In the case of Jensen v. Kansas City, 181 Mo. App. 359, Ellison, J., again considered the Capp case, supra, and in so doing said:
"In the latter case, it was held that children playing in parks were not trespassers and the court said, in effect, that they were the invitees of the city. There a child, with a companion, was wading in a pool, shallow at the edge, but several feet deep towards the center, and practically unguarded. The question of the city's negligence was held to be for the jury.
"In this case the low wall, or balustrade, twenty-five inches high, was the only guard, and it, of course, was no protection, once a child was on top of it, against the*water in the basin of the fountain. The wide coping which, topped this wall was a great temptation to children to run around it. We think it too extreme to say, as was suggested in argument, that a boy five years old could not climb onto the top of a wall of that height without assistance. The trial court was right in submitting the case to the jury."
The Supreme Court of Nebraska in the case of City of Omaha v. Richards, 49 Neb. 244, held: "That the city is liable for the death of a boy ten years old, by drowning, caused by falling* from a section of wooden sidewalk which he was using as a raft upon a pond of water within the corporate limits, a part thereof being* in a public street and part, upon private property, it being shown that such accumulation of water was occasioned by the negligence of the city in grading said street and constructing a storm sewer therein. ' '
The following cases also announce the same principle of law: Daneschocky v. Sieble, 195 Mo. App. 470; Harrison v. K. C. Light Co., 195 Mo. 623; Buckner v. Horse & Mule Co., 221 Mo. l. c. 709-711; Obermeyer v. Chair Co., 229 Mo. l. c. 111; Kupferle v. Ry. Co., 275 Mo. l. c. 457; Washburn v. Light Co., 202 Mo. App. l. c. 116; Thompson v. City of Slater, 197 Mo. App. 247; Hudson v. Power Co., 234 S. W. l. c. 871; Shafir v. Sieben, 233 S. W. 420; Hegberg v. Ry. Co., 164 Mo. App. 514.
VI. There was no error in the instructions giyen for the respondent telling the jury to find tthat the pond in question was attractive for children; that is true, yet the doctrine of the turn-table cases has nothing to do with the ~rincip1es of law underlying this case, but independent of that the instruction was still sufficient, in that they required the jury to find. the pond was dangerous and that the city knew, or should have known, it ii~ time to rectify the dangerous condition.
VIi. The judges who agree thai there should be a recovery by plaintiffs in this case, further agree that the amount of recovery (under previous rulings) should not exceed $5,000; It is therefore adjudged that if plaintiffs will remit the sum of $5,000; as of the date of the original judgment, then the remainder of such judgment ($5,000) will be affirmed as of the date of the original judgment. The remittitur is to be made within ten days, and if not so made then the judgment is to be reversed and remanded.
Walker, White and Ragland, JJ., concur; Graves, G. J., and David E. Blair and Atwood, JJ., dissent, on the ground that there is no liability; Graves, C. J., in an opinion filed, in the result of which Atwood, J., concurs.