Judges: Ferguson, Hays, Hyde, Sturgis
Filed Date: 2/8/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This case comes to the writer on a rehearing granted on the court's own motion for reasons hereafter mentioned. [1] The first opinion, concurred in by all the court, was written by Commissioner HYDE and his statement of the case with slight modifications is now adopted, with the preliminary observation that the fact that both parties to a case take an appeal to this court does not make two cases in this court. It is but one case regardless of there being cross-appeals or appeals by any number of parties. Any party to a suit aggrieved by the judgment may take an appeal in that case (Sec. 1018, R.S. 1929), and when both parties appeal, Section 1032, Revised Statutes 1929, provides for only one transcript or abstract of the record in the appellate court and the terms on which the party not furnishing and paying for it in the first instance may have the benefit thereof and be heard thereon. There is but one case on appeal, though several appellants, and no need of a separate docketing or consolidation of such appeals.
This is an action for personal injuries, from the result of which both plaintiff and defendant Newberry Company appeal. Plaintiff's injuries were caused by a fall on ice which had accumulated on the sidewalk in front of the store of the defendant Newberry Company in Hannibal. The trial court, at the close of all the evidence, sustained a demurrer to the evidence as to defendant Johnson, the manager of the store, and from the court's action relative thereto plaintiff appeals. Plaintiff had a verdict of the jury and judgment against defendant Newberry Company for $10,000, from which it appeals.
The petition herein charges that defendant Newberry Company operated a merchandise establishment and store at Hannibal, Missouri, with officers, agents, and representatives in charge thereof, and that said company and its officers and agents, including defendant Johnson, in charge of and operating the same for it were joint tort-feasors in the wrong herein complained of. Plaintiff's theory was that snow and ice collected on both an awning and the protective structure above it, which melted on the day of her injury, so that water dripped onto the sidewalk and froze, forming a strip of ice across it, because of which she fell to her injury. This negligence is specifically charged in plaintiff's petition as follows:
"Plaintiff states that long before the accident and injuries herein complained of, and at the time thereof, the defendants had wrongfully and carelessly and negligently maintained and operated on and at the front of the store building so occupied by them and over and adjoining the sidewalk leading past the said J.J. Newberry store, at a place constantly used by many pedestrians, an awning extending across the entire front of said store building and which awning during the season of the year when the accident and injury herein complained of occurred, and at other times, was designed to *Page 477 be drawn or rolled up so that the same would lie close to the front of the building, and when properly rolled up was intended to fit into and under a boxed-up construction which protected same from the weather and was intended to prevent the accumulation of ice, snow and water in the folds of said awning.
"Plaintiff states that at and prior to the time of her injury hereinafter described said awning was negligently, carelessly and wrongfully operated and rolled up by defendants so that the folds thereof were not covered or protected by said super-structure hereinbefore mentioned and so maintained that snow, ice and water did collect therein and the cloth of said awning was allowed to slack or be so placed that folds or pockets were formed and that said folds and pockets had become and were at the time receptacles for the accumulation of snow, ice and water, and that they then and for a long time before had contained such accumulations; and further plaintiff says that said awning and box super-structure was so negligently, unskillfully and carelessly maintained, operated and used by defendants that rain, ice and snow were negligently and carelessly permitted by defendants to form and remain thereon and also in, on and about the awning, and to thaw, and run down upon said sidewalk in front of said building and freeze and form dangerous conditions and obstructions thereon to pedestrians. . . .
"Plaintiff states that on or about Saturday evening at 9:30 P.M., January 25th, 1930, at a time when many people were passing in front of said J.J. Newberry store, she, the plaintiff, was lawfully using said sidewalk at the place herein described and was passing over said place in company with members of her family and was carrying bundles and articles in her arms, having with her her small child, and was at said time and place proceeding along in a prudent and careful manner, in the exercise of due and proper care on her part, unaware and unwarned of the dangerous condition in and upon said sidewalk when she stepped upon said slippery and dangerous ice and instantly she was caused to slip and fall to the concrete sidewalk with force and violence."
Defendants' separate answers stated a general denial, that the walk was under the exclusive control of the city, and pleaded contributory negligence of plaintiff. The evidence showed that plaintiff, with her husband and five-year-old son, were walking along the sidewalk in front of defendant's store, Saturday night, January 25, 1930; that there were many other people on the streets; that although there was snow and ice in the street the walks were generally clean; and that plaintiff was walking along naturally, looking where she was going and glancing in at defendant's store window when she fell and was injured. She said that after she had fallen she noticed there was a strip of ice two to two and one-half feet wide clear across the walk from the building to the curb. Plaintiff was corroborated by *Page 478 other witnesses as to such strip of ice extending all the way across the sidewalk, which was twelve feet wide. Defendant's store was in the principal business district of Hannibal and the walk was well lighted both by street lights and lights in defendant's windows. The 25th day of January, 1930, was clear, but there was about six inches of snow on the ground from previous snowfalls. There had been heavy snows earlier in January and the temperature had been as as low as seventeen degrees below zero. On the 20th it snowed all day and there was nine and one-half inches of snow on the ground. There was a light snow (about one-half inch) on the 21st. On January 21st, 22nd and 23rd, temperatures below zero were registered. On January 24th the highest was twenty-nine degrees above zero. On January 25th the early morning temperature was fifteen degrees above zero; from ten A.M. to five P.M., it was twenty degrees or more, the highest being twenty-three degrees from two to three P.M.; by nine P.M. the temperature had dropped to ten degrees above zero. There was "a little sift of snow" (.02 inch) that evening.
The box-like hood or casing over the awning extended across the entire front of the building and projected from the building about ten inches. It had no gutter or groove to carry away water from it and its surface was a continuous straight incline away from the building, except for a small depression near the outer edge; it had a fall of one inch; and the drainage from it was directly upon the sidewalk or upon the awning if it was not completely rolled up under it. The awning rolled up on a roller, which was operated by a crank; when completely rolled up, the awning was entirely under the casing. Plaintiff, however, had evidence tending to show that prior to plaintiff's injury at various times during the month of January, 1930, the awning was noticed not entirely rolled up under the casing, but extending six or eight inches or more out from under the outside edge of it; that there was snow and ice lodged on both the awning and casing; and that water was seen dripping on the sidewalk from melting snow and ice on the awning and structure above it.
There was not much specific evidence as to these conditions on January 25th. A police officer said: "I passed up and down there on the twenty-fifth. There was snow and ice on the street. I noticed water dripping from the awning or cornice. This water fell on the sidewalk and froze there in a space about one footor one and one-half feet long. I noticed a similar condition on prior occasions. . . . If the awning is pulled up properly, it is clear under the hood, but if not, it protrudes. I cannot say as to its condition on January twenty-fifth, 1930; . . . I have seen that (water) there several times. . . . In the afternoon ice was there from dripping off the awning. . . . Water was dripping offthe awning and onto *Page 479 the sidewalk. Water ran off onto the awning and then onto the sidewalk." Plaintiff's mother testified: "I went into the Newberry store that afternoon. I noticed water dripping down onthe sidewalk and running across the walk. . . . I did not see where this water was coming from, just saw it was dripping down. When I saw it the water was not freezing. . . . I saw no snow or ice in front of the Newberry building but I saw the water across the sidewalk. . . . Mr. Johnson (a defendant) said that he was awfully sorry that it had happened; that the snow and ice had collected on the awning and melted and run down along the sidewalk and they had failed to clear it off." Plaintiff testified that Brown, one of defendant's employees, said: "They just failed to clean that up, that melted that afternoon and dripped down and froze since it got colder. . . . That he was sorry they neglected to clean that off that came from the awning." Defendant's employees testified that the only ice on the sidewalk was a few streaks toward the curb formed by snow or sleet which fell there; that since the store faced east the awning was customarily put down in the morning and rolled up at noon. They said the awning was completely rolled up on the day of the accident and had no snow or ice on it, but they seem to have based this on the general custom, and not upon any independent recollection of what was done that day or which one of them did it. Defendant Johnson, however, testified: "On the twenty-fifth of January the awning was up from eight o'clock in the morning until twelve noon. On that day there was no snow and ice on the awning. The awning was rolled up at noon. . . . At the time we closed the store at 10:30 there was no ice on the leveled part of the sidewalk but a little on the extreme edge toward the curb."
On this condition of the pleadings and evidence, both parties having rested, the defendant W.W. Johnson asked and the court marked as given and so announced, an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and directing the jury that "under the pleadings, the law and the evidence the verdict must be for the defendant W.W. Johnson." Such instruction was not read to the jury or acted on by it for the reason that plaintiff's attorney announced that "in view of the giving of defendant's instruction in the nature of a demurrer on behalf of defendant Johnson, plaintiff takes an involuntary nonsuit as to such defendant." A like demurrer to the evidence was asked at the same time by defendant Newberry Company and was overruled. The above is shown by the bill of exceptions; and the certified copy of the judgment filed in this court shows that on the third day of the trial, January 16, 1931, all the evidence being heard, defendant Johnson tenders an instruction "in the form of a demurrer or directed verdict, and after said instruction as to W.W. Johnson is given" and "before the jury returns *Page 480 a verdict, the plaintiff takes an involuntary nonsuit as to defendant W.W. Johnson, with leave to move to set the same aside by reason of the giving of the above instruction. The separate demurrer as to defendant J.J. Newberry is overruled." The defendant Newberry Company then filed a petition and bound for removal of the case to the United States District Court on the theory that it was then the sole defendant, which removal was denied. The case was submitted to the jury on instructions given on behalf of the plaintiff and the defendant Newberry Company. One of the instructions given for plaintiff directed the jury that if the finding was for plaintiff to find "against the defendant Newberry Company and assess plaintiff's damages at the sum of ____ Dollars." The verdict of the jury followed this form. The certified copy of the judgment from which we have made the foregoing extracts also recites the return into court of the jury's verdict for plaintiff and against the Newberry Company and makes the formal recital that plaintiff have and recover of defendant J.J. Newberry Company the sum of $10,000, etc. (These details are stated because of the suggestion that there is no final judgment disposing of the case as to defendant W.W. Johnson.) The record then shows that within four days the defendant Newberry Company filed its motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, which were in due course overruled. These motions say nothing about defendant Johnson and proceed as though he had never been a defendant. The same is true of defendant Newberry Company's affidavit for appeal and the order granting same; also of the bond for appeal.
However, on the same day that defendant Newberry Company filed its motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, January 20, 1931, the plaintiff filed her motion to set aside her involuntary nonsuit as to defendant Johnson taken, as we have seen, after the evidence was all in and the court announced his sustension of the demurrer thereto. This motion was overruled and exceptions saved. Plaintiff also then filed affidavit for and was granted an appeal.
[2] Defendant Newberry Company perfected its appeal to this court and filed its abstract of the record and brief as if it were the only appellant and with only incidental reference to defendant Johnson. Its record and brief are in the case of "Helen Stith, respondent, v. J.J. Newberry Company, appellant," and its statement, assignment of errors, and points and authorities relate wholly to alleged errors committed during the trial as to the Newberry Company. Plaintiff, by supplemental abstract of the record, showed that she had appealed from the court's action in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence as to defendant Johnson, and by her brief and argument insisted that no error was committed as to defendant Newberry Company, but that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence as to defendant Johnson. She asked that the judgment *Page 481
against Newberry Company be affirmed in its entirety and that she be awarded a new trial as to defendant Johnson, something this court could not do. [Neal v. Curtis Co. Mfg. Co.,
Such was the status of this case when it was first argued and submitted here and was assigned to Commissioner HYDE. His opinion, adopted by the court, after the statement of the facts as to the merits heretofore noted, continues:
[3] Defendant Newberry on its appeal contends that the court erred in overruling its demurrer to the evidence. It argues mainly the proposition that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. We think that this was clearly for the jury. The ice was a narrow strip across the sidewalk at a place where it would hardly be expected. Plaintiff was walking on a wide sidewalk which appeared to be clear of ice and snow, particularly the inside part where she was walking. She saw many other people similarly walking on this sidewalk. Of course, it is the duty of every pedestrian to keep a general lookout so as to observe obstructions or dangers, to use his senses, and to see what is clearly before his eyes. There was, however, nothing so unusual under these circumstances in the conduct of plaintiff, in walking along on Saturday night in a crowded business district looking into storekeepers' display windows, that it would be contributory negligence as a matter of law. (For cases covering the general subject of contributory negligence in falling on slippery sidewalks see annotation in 13 American Law Reports, 73; as to instructions, see Gleason v. Texas Co. (Mo.), 46 S.W.2d 546.) We hold that it was for the jury to determine whether or not plaintiff was exercising reasonable care under the circumstances.
[4] As to the sufficiency of the evidence to show negligence on the part of defendant, there appears to be a closer question. An abutting property owner is not liable for injuries resulting from snow and ice on the sidewalk in front of his premises where it came there by natural causes, either from originally falling there or from drainage there because of the natural drainage of his property. In such cases the responsibility for maintaining a safe condition for travel and the liability for failing to do so is that of the municipality alone. [Norton v. St. Louis,
Considering the evidence in this case, in the light of these principles, it would seem unlikely that the awning casing alone was a structure which would collect a sufficient amount of ice, snow and water so as to discharge water therefrom in one spot in any unreasonable amount. There was nothing shown about its construction from which it could be inferred that it would collect and discharge water from it in one place so that it could freeze and form a sheet *Page 483
of ice clear across the sidewalk. Such drainage as came from it would apparently drip off in small quantities along the whole front of the building. As a practical matter it would seem that in this climate it would be impossible, during certain periods in the winter months, to prevent some drip onto the sidewalk from ice forming on cornices, shutters, window sills, door frames or other slight projections on fronts of buildings. To hold an abutting owner liable for every such drip which freezes on the sidewalk would almost make him an insurer. Ordinary care should certainly not require guttering of such places or scraping away every particle of ice which forms on them. Plaintiff's case, however, is not predicated upon slight drips along the whole front of the building from the superstructure above the awning. Plaintiff did not claim that there was a strip of ice under the casing parallel to the front of the building, but a sheet of ice extending from it clear across the sidewalk in only one place. From the portion of plaintiff's petition above quoted, it will be seen that plaintiff claims that defendant maintained a larger projecting structure than the casing itself by failing to keep the awning properly rolled up under its casing; that the awning and casing together made a structure which accumulated a considerable amount of snow and ice; that snow and ice and water therefrom collected in quantities in folds or slack in the awning in such a manner that it was discharged in one spot and ran down upon and across the sidewalk, in one place, in a continuous stream across the same. In ruling the demurrer, we must apply the rule that the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff's case and that plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of the most favorable inferences which can be drawn therefrom. Plaintiff's evidence that there was a strip of ice two to two and one-half feet wide all the way across the twelve-foot sidewalk tends to show the existence of the condition of the awning alleged. "An event may be evidenced circumstantially by a cause or by an effect." [McDonald v. Kansas City Gas Co.,
[5] Defendant argues also that there was no evidence of notice of the condition. However, the evidence tends to show a condition of the awning, which existed by reason of the acts of defendant's employees in unrolling it and placing it in an improper position. It also tends to show that such a condition would have caused snow and ice to collect thereon and water, from the melting thereof, to be discharged upon one place on the sidewalk so as to make a stream which would freeze into a solid sheet of ice all the way across it. The evidence having tended to show that such a condition of the awning was created by defendant's acts, it was for the jury, if they believed it, to say whether or not defendant ever remedied it prior to the accident. [See Davis v. Buck's Stove Range Co.,
This portion of the opinion we again approve. There were other alleged errors arising during the trial of the case on its merits complained of by defendant Newberry Company which we have examined but first thought and still think are not reversible.
[6] The opinion of Commissioner HYDE considers at length and with learned ability the question raised by plaintiff's appeal, if properly before us, as to the liability of defendant Johnson as a joint tort-feasor and the court's error in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence and discharging him. Our first opinion holds, and we think properly so, on the authority of Orcutt v. Century Bldg. Co.,
[7] What we have here said as to the joint liability of Johnson, a resident of this State, and the Newberry Company, a nonresident, joined as codefendants, is a complete answer to the contention that when the case was disposed of as to Johnson by sustaining his demurrer to the evidence, the defendant Newberry Company was entitled to a removal of the case to the Federal Court. Certainly if Johnson is legally and in fact jointly liable with the Newberry Company, he was rightly made a codefendant, and the fact that the trial court erroneously discharged him against plaintiff's will and over her protest would not confer on defendant Newberry Company a right to remove the case to the Federal Court. [Craig v. Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co.,
[8] The question, however, of there being error in the action of the trial court in sustaining defendant Johnson's demurrer to the evidence and discharging him from liability, thereby forcing, in a legal sense, the plaintiff to take a nonsuit as to him with leave, is not properly before this court for review for the reason that the plaintiff's attempted appeal from the court's order refusing to set aside such nonsuit is conceded to be a nullity. What we have said, therefore, as to the liability or nonliability of defendant Johnson may throw some light on other questions properly before us by way of argument, but that is all. In Bonanomi v. Purcell,
[10] Defendant Newberry Company makes the further assignment that "the court erred in admitting evidence concerning the condition of the awning and superstructure and water dripping from the same at a period long after the date of the alleged accident." Most of this evidence was offered to show that snow and ice would melt in the afternoon of a sunny day at a temperature of twenty-three degrees above zero. It happened that on one of the days of the trial, which was a year after the accident, the temperature ranged from six degrees above zero in the morning to twenty-three degrees above zero in the afternoon. Some of plaintiff's witnesses testified that they saw snow melting on that day during the trial. In this connection some of them were also allowed to testify that they saw the awning protruding six or eight inches from the casing with snow on it after the date of the accident. An objection was made on behalf of defendant to this testimony as to subsequent condition which was overruled and defendant saves exceptions thereto. However, at the close of all of the evidence the court suggested that if defendant's objection was renewed it would sustain it as to all testimony relating to the condition of the awning and other surroundings of the Newberry store at a date subsequent to January 25, 1930. Defendant Newberry Company did renew the objection to all of such testimony and the court sustained its objection and orally directed the jury to disregard all of such evidence. There was no further objection made on the part of defendant nor did it make any request to have the jury discharged. The court, however, of its own motion, also gave the following written instruction:
"The court instructs the jury that all the evidence of the condition of the awning and superstructure after the date of plaintiff's alleged fall is withdrawn from the consideration of the jury, and you will disregard such in arriving at your verdict."
Under these circumstances whatever error there may have been in admitting this testimony was cured by the withdrawal instruction [Harrison v. Kansas City Electric Light Co.,
[11] Defendant Newberry Company makes the further assignment that the court erred in entering judgment against it for ten thousand dollars. The jury did not write the amount of the verdict in words, but set it down in figures. The figures were a dollar mark, a one, after which was placed a large cipher, after which there was a large dot or period. These figures were followed by three smaller ciphers which were above a line extending from the bottom. Defendant contends that this is a verdict for ten dollars, on the theory that the dot should be construed as a decimal point and that adding ciphers after a decimal point, regardless of the number of *Page 488 ciphers added, does not increase the value of the figure. Defendant also says that if it cannot be construed as a verdict for ten dollars, it is so ambiguous and uncertain that it should be set aside. The record, however, showed "That said verdict was read by the court to the jury as ten thousand dollars and the jury were asked whether that was their verdict and they responded that it was."
An affidavit was also filed, made by all the jurors, stating that the amount of their verdict was ten thousand dollars, which affidavit was filed two days after the filing of defendant's motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment and before said motions were passed upon by the court. It has been held that such affidavits are proper because they support and do not impeach the verdict. [Hays v. Hogan,
[12] The point on which we held in our first opinion that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded is that this case as against the Newberry Company is based solely on the doctrine of respondeat superior and both the master and servant are sued and there can be no judgment against that company as master without a judgment against the servant Johnson. We based our ruling on McGinnis v. Railroad,
The rule, we think, is one of logic rather than law. The rule underlying cases of this character is that the master is liable for the negligence of the servant on the ground that one who does a thing by and through another, his servant, does it himself and is responsible for the manner in which it is done. By using reason and common sense in applying this rule of law that if the servant does the master's work in a negligent manner, the master is liable, we must also say that if the servant did not do the work negligently, there is nothing for the master to be liable for. All that the master can do is to prove that the servant was not negligent, and having proved that, as the jury finds, there is no negligence to be imputed to the master. The facts being such that there is no negligence of the master unless there be negligence of the servant, then a finding of no negligence of the servant is a finding of no negligence of the master and the jury cannot award damages against such master. So it is said that the jury cannot be allowed to return an inconsistent, contradictory, self-destructive verdict — a "monstrosity," as Judge GRAVES calls it.
[13] In this case, however, the jury was not guilty of returning any such inconsistent or contradictory verdict. It was not called on or permitted to pass on the question of the servant Johnson's negligence in causing plaintiff's injury in falling on the icy sidewalk. That question was withdrawn from it and the only question submitted to the jury was the negligence of the Newberry Company, and we are now holding that it properly and on sufficient evidence decided that question against that company. There was no error, inconsistency, or contradiction in the jury's verdict. Had the jury been allowed to do so under the proper instructions of the court as to the law, it likely would have found Johnson guilty of negligence, and we are now holding that there was sufficient evidence to take that question to the jury — a matter that we can inquire into on this phase of the case regardless of plaintiff's appeal. The error in this case is not in any inconsistent and contradictory finding by the jury as to Johnson not being negligent and the Newberry Company being negligent, but in the fact that the court, under an erroneous view of the law perhaps or a misinterpretation of the evidence, sustained the demurrer to the evidence as to Johnson and refused to submit that question to the jury. The error was in that the court erroneously discharged Johnson from liability as a matter of law. The truth is that when the court sustained the demurrer *Page 491
to the evidence as to Johnson, the servant, it should have sustained the demurrer as to Newberry Company as master if its liability was wholly dependent on Johnson's negligence, but that was an error of the court and not any inconsistency or contradiction in the jury's verdict. It has been held that a failure of the jury, through inadvertence or mistake of fact or law or otherwise, to return any verdict as to the servant but only one against the master does not present the question of an inconsistent, contradictory, and self-destructive verdict. [Whitesell v. Joplin P. Ry. Co. (Kan.), 222 P. 133; Benson v. Southern Pac. Co. (Cal.),
The application of the rule of logic that a verdict for the servant is in effect a verdict for the master in a case where the liability of the master is wholly dependent on the negligence of the servant, and is contradictory of a finding against the master, presupposes that there has been a correct trial of the question of the servant's negligence on the merits and that such verdict is not attributable to or brought about by erroneous instructions to the jury as to the law. In fact, in such a case the jury is only to try the question of the servant's negligence and from that alone determine the master's liability in accordance with its finding, but if because of an erroneous instruction the jury does not express in its verdict its real belief as to the servant's negligence or comes to a wrong conclusion as to the servant's liability therefor, but reaches a correct conclusion as to the master's liability, then the logic is the other way and the verdict is correct. In other words, the rule as to contradictory and inconsistent verdicts being self-destructive does not apply when such is brought about by errors of law. While the principle we are discussing finds its most frequent application in tort actions against master and servant, being a rule of logic rather than law, it applies, however, in all cases where the relationship of one defendant to the other determines his liability for the negligence of such other. Thus the duty of a city to keep its streets reasonably safe for travel thereon makes it liable in law for the result of negligent acts of others rendering its streets unsafe, and in Lindman v. Kansas City,
[14] Nor can we say that the negligence causing plaintiff's injuries in this case was solely that of the servant Johnson. It may well be that he, as manager of the store and business, was responsible for negligence of the other employees under his direction, but each could be held responsible for his own negligent act of misfeasance or nonfeasance. There were three employees of Newberry Company other than Johnson and all of them at times attended to letting down and rolling up the awning and taking care of ice on the sidewalk. All that plaintiff had to prove in making a case against Newberry Company was to prove that the awning in question was so negligently rolled up and kept in a condition that water and snow was collected, melted and run down in such quantities in one place on the sidewalk as to form a dangerous ridge or streak of ice across the sidewalk, on which plaintiff slipped and fell to her injury, and that this condition was due to the negligence of one or more of the Newberry Company's employees. It was not material or necessary to show which one of the employees was to blame or most to blame in this matter. If the jury could properly find from the evidence that such servants or any of them other than Johnson were in whole or in part responsible for this negligent condition of the awning and sidewalk, then such was not due solely to Johnson's *Page 493
negligence and acquitting him of negligence did not render the verdict as to the Newberry Company self-contradictory or discharge the Newberry Company. One of these servants, Alexander, testified that it was his duty to clean the walks in the morning and run up the awning at noon. Another clerk, Brown, said that Alexander usually attended to the awning and that it was unrolled that morning and rolled back at noon; that he did not know whether he or Alexander rolled it up that particular day. This is not a case where nobody could be or was negligent with respect to this awning except Johnson and a finding that he was not negligent did not negative all possible negligence of the other servants of the Newberry Company supported by substantial evidence. [Vest v. S.S. Kresge Co. (Mo. App.), 213 S.W. 165; Stuart v. Standard Oil Co.,
We should also note that defendant Newberry Company never raised the point at the trial or in this court on the original hearing, that the holding that there was no evidence sufficient to show the negligence of the servant Johnson was in effect a holding that Newberry Company could not be liable, and that the verdict against Newberry Company was inconsistent, contradictory, and self-destructive within the doctrine of the McGinnis and similar cases. We need not go outside the errors complained of by appellant. This question, therefore, has not been properly preserved and presented for review in this court.
[15] There has also been injected into this case since its first submission here the suggestion that there is no such final judgment disposing of all the parties and issues as supports any appeal. We have now dimissed plaintiff's appeal as a nullity and the case stands on defendant Newberry Company's appeal from the judgment against it for $10,000. The claim is that the judgment is not final, though complete in favor of plaintiff and against the Newberry Company, since it does not contain a formal recital that plaintiff take nothing from defendant Johnson and that he go hence without day, or equivalent words, and not being final as to him (Lyons Reesman v. Rollinson,
We have a statute, Section 960, Revised Statutes 1929, which provides that "the plaintiff shall be allowed to dismiss his suit or take a nonsuit at any time before the same is finally submitted to the jury," and this is a right which the court cannot deny at least without good cause. [Mayer v. Old,
Particularly is it true that in actions for tort a plaintiff may at any stage of the proceeding before final submission dismiss or take a nonsuit as to any defendant without discharging the others. [18 C.J. 1162.] As any one of the tort-feasors may be sued singly or in connection with any other tort-feasor, the defendant can never object that another tort-feasor was not sued or that the case has been dismissed against him. "Where several wrongdoers are charged with the same tort, plaintiff may, at any stage of the proceeding, dismiss as to one or more of them without affecting the merits of the action as to the others." [Berkson v. Railroad,
Suppose this court should do no more than examine the record and enter a judgment dismissing both appeals on the ground that no final judgment appears disposing of all the issues as to both the defendants. The result would clearly be that the case would stand unaffected by this appeal and just as it is or would be if nobody had appealed. What would have been then done doubtless is that unless plaintiff's judgment against Newberry Company had been promptly paid, an execution would issue. If the judgment is defective in the manner claimed, clearly the court records and minutes are sufficient to warrant a nunc pro tunc entry by court order supplying the deficiency and the judgment would stand complete. Such would be a useless formality and we think unnecessary.
We have considered the question of the judgment being excessive but it would serve no useful purpose to discuss the evidence. We rule this point also against defendant.
The result is that plaintiff's appeal is dismissed and the judgment of the trial court should be and is affirmed. It is so ordered. Ferguson, C., concurs; Hyde, C., concurs in result.
Kansas City Suburban Belt Railway Co. v. Herman ( 1902 )
New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad v. Jopes ( 1891 )
Michely v. Mississippi Valley Structural Steel Co. ( 1927 )
Wade v. Campbell and Coates Hotel Co. ( 1922 )
State Ex Rel. Hancock v. Falkenhainer ( 1927 )
Russell v. Sincoe Realty Company ( 1922 )
Neal v. Curtis & Co. Manufacturing Co. ( 1931 )
McDonald Ex Rel. Baber v. Kansas City Gas Co. ( 1933 )
Stephens v. D. M. Oberman Manufacturing Co. ( 1934 )
Barr v. Nafziger Baking Co. ( 1931 )
Bonfils v. Martin's Food Service Co. ( 1923 )
Davis v. Buck's Stove & Range Co. ( 1932 )
Stuart v. Standard Oil Co. ( 1922 )
American Car & Foundry Co. v. Kettlehake ( 1915 )
McCollum Ex Rel. Curator v. Winnwood Amusement Co. ( 1933 )
City of Springfield v. Clement ( 1920 )
Chrum v. St. Louis Public Service Co. ( 1951 )
Gladys Smith v. J. C. Penney Company ( 1958 )
Myers v. Union Electric Light & Power Co. ( 1939 )
Devine v. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. ( 1942 )
Hines v. Western Union Telegraph Co. ( 1949 )
Giles v. Moundridge Milling Co. ( 1943 )
Boyd v. Logan Jones Dry Goods Co. ( 1937 )
Luettecke v. City of St. Louis ( 1940 )
Newdiger v. Kansas City ( 1938 )
Sheridan v. City of St. Joseph ( 1937 )
Moss v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co. ( 1938 )
State Ex Rel. Union Electric Light & Power Co. v. Sevier ( 1936 )
State Ex Rel. Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Hostetter ( 1941 )
Lambert Ex Rel. Lambert v. Jones ( 1936 )