Court Opinion

ID: 8265512
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 16:00:48.560893+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:20.175018
License: Public Domain

NORTONI, J.
This is a suit for damages alleged to have accrued on account of defendant’s negligence in maintaining a defective fence adjacent to the highAvay. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
The action originated in a justice’s court and a recovery of tAventy dollars is sought as damages to plaintiff’s skirt which AAras caught and torn on a Avire protruding from defendant’s fence over the granitoid sidewalk.
The hrst argument for a reversal of the judgment is to the effect that the statement of .the cause of action is insufficient to support the judgment. After formal matters, the statement recites substantially that defendant oaviis a certain property, describing it, in the city of St. Louis adjacent to a public street thereof and that he had some time theretofore constructed and then maintained a Avire fence in such a manner as to cause tAvo barbs or ends of the wire to protrude over and upon the sideAvalk, and on May 31, 1908, Avhile plaintiff Avas passing on the sidewalk adjacent to said premises her dress was caught on a barb or wire projecting from said fence and torn, to her damage in the sum of tAventy dollars; wherefore judgment is prayed for that amount.
The point made against the sufficiency of the statement is that it noAA'here alleges the wire fence was dangerous nor that it AAras either negligently constructed or maintained. The omission of express averments to the. effect suggested is wholly unimportant for they are both implied or may reasonably be inferred from the facts stated. The statement Avas challenged ore tenus at the opening of the trial. In such circumstances the suffi*495ciency of the statement is to he tested after allowing all reasonable inferences and implications which it affords in favor of the pleader. [Thomasson v. Mercantile Town Mut. Ins. Co., 217 Mo. 485, 116 S. W. 1092; s. c. 114 Mo. App. 109, 89 S. W. 564, 1135; Porter v. Railroad, 137 Mo. App. 293, 117 S. W. 680; Rife v. Reynolds, 137 Mo. App. 290, 117 S. W. 652.] Besides, the case having originated before a justice of the peace, the law is satisfied if the statement is sufficient to notify the defendant with reasonable certainty of the cause of action he is called upon to meet and bar another action on account of the same subject-matter. And this is true though the case proceeds for a negligent injury and no specific averment of the negligent act or the dangerous condition of the fence is made. Such negligent or dangerous condition may be understood from the other facts recited. [Hall v. St. L. & Sub. R. Co., 124 Mo. App. 661, 101 S. W. 1137; Polhans v. A. T. & S. F. R. Co., 45 Mo. App. 153; s. c. 115 Mo. 535, 22 S. W. 478; Iba v. H. & St. Joe R. Co., 45 Mo. 469; Burt v. Warne, 31 Mo. 296.]
The evidence tends to prove that several weeks before plaintiff’s skirt was caught on the wire, defendant had set posts and stretched several wires thereon immediately adjacent to the granitoid sideAvalk in the public street abutting his property. At the point where the Avires'were made fast to the posts at the corner of his lot, they were tAvisted so that their ends protruded over the Avalk in such a manner as to render it likely that one passing might come in contact thereAvith. As plaintiff was passing on the granitoid walk, she met a lady and two children and in stepping to the side of the walk for the purpose of passing them, her dress was caught on one of the twisted Avires and rent, to her damage in the sum of twenty dollars.
There can be no doubt that it is the duty of the owner of land adjoining a highAvay not to interfere with the safety of persons using the same. The highway is *496open and free to one and all alike and adjacent property-owners are required to exercise ordinary care in constructing and maintaining abutting improvements on tkeir property so as not to inflict or entail injuries upon one rightfully passing on the walk. It is therefore the rule that where one is injured while rightfully passing on the highway because of the defective or negligent construction of a fence which protrudes over the same from the abutting property, the owner whose negligent conduct entailed the injury may be required to respond in damages. [Foster v. Swope, 41 Mo. App. 137; Brown v. Wabash R. Co., 90 Mo. App. 20; Whitaker’s Smith on Negligence 113 (2 Am. Ed.), 140, 141.] See, also, Buesching v. St. Louis Gas Light Co., 73 Mo. 219.
But it is said the court should have declared the plaintiff negligent as a matter of law and denied a recovery for the reason it appears she had some knowledge of the dangerous condition of the fence. We are not impressed with this argument in the least, for a person is not required to abandon á convenient or accustomed route of travel in a public street because of a danger adjoining thereto unless the use of the street under the circumstances would be inconsistent with the exercise of ordinary care. The mere fact of knowledge of the danger is not sufficient of itself to defeat the right of recovery as a matter of law, if an ordinarily prudent person would go about it in the same way; and on'e may recover in such circumstances notwithstanding his knowledge of the obstruction or defect, provided he was at the time exercising ordinary care for his own safety. Usually, as in this case, the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence in such matters is for the jury. [Smith v. City of St. Joseph, 45 Mo. 449; Buesching v. Gas Light Co., 73 Mo. 219; Foster v. Swope, 41 Mo. App. 137.] There is nothing in the evidence characterizing plaintiff’s conduct different from that of an ordinarily prudent person.
The suit was originálly instituted against both the *497defendant and Ms wife, but was afterwards dismissed as to tbe wife and proceeded against-tbe defendant alone. Upon defendant’s offering bis wife as a witness after tbe suit was dismissed as to her,, the court sustained an objection against her testifying for the reason she was the wife of defendant. It is argued this was error. We are not so persuaded. No one can doubt the wife was an incompetent witness at common law in an action against her husband such as the one now- under consideration and unless she is rendered competent as a witness under the provisions of section 4656, Revised Statutes 1899, section 4656, An. St. 1906, her ineompetency continues as before. [Layson v. Cooper, 174 Mo. 211, 73 S. W. 472; Brinsmade v. Groll, 14 Mo. App. 444.] There is nothing in the statute referred to which in any manner suggests the competency of defendant’s wife in this case and the court did not err in so ruling.
We have examined the instructions given which fully and fairly presented every issue in the case and required the jury to find negligence on the part of defendant and the exercise of ordinary care on the .part of plaintiff as a prerequisite to a verdict for her. The instructions refused were either discretionary in the circumstances of the ease or fully covered in those given. The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
All concur.