The Law Office of Kurt H King

July 10, 2014

One Contempt Case Followed By Another–Barred By Res Judicata?

Filed under: Divorce,Family Law,Paternity,Support — kurthking @ 9:49 pm
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Ex-spouse sues for contempt in a second case to hold their former spouse in contempt  for a violation that existed at the time of a prior case between the parties.  Is the second action barred by Missouri’s doctrine of res judicata since the violation had already occurred by the time of the first case?

The Eastern and Western Districts of the Missouri Court of Appeals have decided this question differently but the two cases may turn on whether the party in contempt had the ability to pay and purge the contempt at the time of the first contempt motion.  In one case (Foster) the party in contempt may well have had the ability to pay for his contemptuous actions at the time of the first case, while the contemptuous party in the other case (Walton) definitely lacked that ability at first.  The Western District of the Missouri Court of Appeals ruled in Walton v. Walton, 789 S.W.2d 64 (Mo. Ct. App. W.D. 1990), that the petitioner may press forwards in the second case to recover for contempt that occurred before judgment in the first case.  Compare the Eastern District’s holding that  the relief sought in a second contempt case is partially barred by res judicata in Foster v. Foster, 39 S.W.3d 523 (Mo. Ct. App. E.D. 2001).

In Walton, the trial court first ruled on a contempt motion in the parties’ divorce case that the husband was in contempt of court for not paying maintenance but decided not to confine him for failure to pay temporary maintenance while the divorce case was pending.  The decision implies that at the time of the second contempt action (in part to recover the same unpaid maintenance and attorney fees), the husband’s ability to pay had increased to the point where he could purge the contempt.  This situation seems to reoccur frequently in Missouri as courts decline to hold a guilty spouse in contempt due to financial or practical concerns.  Recognizing these circumstances, the Western District affirmed the trial court’s decision to jail the husband for his failure to pay maintenance and attorney fees he now had an ability to pay.

Walton finds some support outside Missouri.  After considering the practical ramifications that flow from swings in the “violating” party’s financial ability to pay, the Supreme Court of Georgia approved a trial court’s refusal to apply res judicata in such a contempt case.  Beach v. Beach, 224 Ga. 701, 164 S.E.2d 114 (1968).   Pointing out that such a contempt proceeding was “merely one method of enforcing [the divorce judgment],” that court observed that contempt proceedings do not change the original judgment they seek to enforce, “but only imposed terms under which he could purge himself of the charge of contempt.”  Since the former wife had not yet recovered the monies originally awarded her in the divorce judgment, the trial court correctly permitted her to seek that relief again in the second contempt case.  224 Ga. at 702-703.  “This principle [res judicata] is not applicable to the facts of the present case.”  The Western District’s decision in Walton resembles at of the Georgia Supreme Court in Beach.

The Eastern District’s decision in Foster is less forgiving.  There the Eastern District partially reversed the trial court, taking away on appeal the former wife’s recovery for her cost of health insurance (that husband had been ordered to provide at his expense) as the premiums that accrued prior to the date of the judgment on her first contempt motion, in which she claimed the same damages but then deferred to be asserted at a later date, the second contempt motion being filed 20 months later.  The Eastern District simply applied standard res judicata principles to the situation in Foster without mention of the husband’s ability to pay for the damages caused by his violation of the divorce court’s judgment.

Foster comes across as rigid.  It makes little room  for situations where the violating party acted in contempt of the court’s order but lacks the ability to pay, and therefore cannot be jailed to force payment.   Fairness should afford the damaged party opportunity to refile for contempt and recover those same damages when the violation party’s gains the ability to pay as of the time of the second case.  So long as there is no double recovery, no unfair prejudice results to the violating party who did not have the ability to pay the first time around.

Perhaps the key to both cases is the violator’s ability to pay–the ex-husband in Foster having the ability to pay during the first contempt case and former wife filing multiple contempt cases without good cause, versus Walton where the husband could not pay in the first case but could at the time of the second for contempt.

And while change in finances may be one circumstance that would cause a court not to apply res judicata where there are multiple contempt motions, other changes of circumstances could have the same effect.  For instance, where a party has hidden or stolen property awarded to the other spouse but this is not discovered until after the first contempt motion; or if jailing the former spouse for not paying a credit card debt would cost him his job and make him unable to pay child support; or where the court looks at the contempt as a relatively minor violation not worthy of a commitment order; or if the property the contemnor took is first said to be “stolen” until found after the first contempt case; or if the judge simply dislikes putting folks in jail for not following the letter of the judgment.

Res judicata and contempt motions are just not a good fit.

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

http://www.kurthking.com

 

Family Law–Divorce, Modifications, Paternity, Child Custody and Support

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy

General Matters

 

 

June 12, 2014

WHEN STEP-PARENTS AND OTHER NON-BIOLOGICAL PARENTS MAY HAVE TO PAY CHILD SUPPORT BY MISSOURI LAW

Filed under: Divorce,Family Law,Paternity,Support — kurthking @ 8:41 pm
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Missouri recognizes at least two exceptions to the general rule that a husband is not bound to support illegitimate children born to his wife before or during the marriage.  Those exceptions are: 1)  express contract; and, 2) equitable estoppel.

Several Missouri appellate court opinions address issues as to whether the facts of a particular case merit application of one or both of those exceptions.  Thus far, only one Missouri case so holds, that being the early case of L . . . v. L . . ., 497 S.W.2d 840 (Mo. Ct. App. W.D. 1973), where husband expressly contracted to support the child to be born as consideration for wife’s agreement to marry him.

Cases ruling against the proponent of such an exception include: White v. White, 293 S.W.3d 1 (Mo. Ct. App. W.D. 2009) (same sex partners; failure to plead and prove the elements of express contract or equitable estoppel); Jefferson v. Jefferson, 137 S.W.3d 510 (Mo. Ct. App. E.D. 2004) (Missouri has not adopted the “equitable parent” doctrine; wife misrepresented to husband that he was father of child); Stein v. Stein, 831 S.W.2d 684 (Mo. Ct. App. E.D. 1992) (divorce filed before adoption final; wife, with a profession and independent financial means, adopted on her own, husband having withdrawn from the adoption; husband’s representations that he would support child were made to adoption and immigration officials, not wife, so no express contract; no equitable adoption because no detrimental reliance and no injustice to wife or child); S.E.M. v. D.M.M., 664 S.W.2d 665 (Mo. Ct. App. E.D. 1984) (wife became pregnant while separated from husband, then reconciled, husband treated child as his own until final separation when child was approximately eight months old; wife’s agreement to reconcile not sufficient consideration for an express contract that husband support the child; no detrimental reliance for equitable estoppel).

Step-parents beware.

 

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

Family Law–Divorce, Modifications, Child Custody/Support/Visitation, Paternity, Guardianship

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy for Debtors

http://www.kurthking.com

April 22, 2014

When Can You Sue Again?–Res Judicata & Collateral Estoppel

In its April 15, 2014, Xiaoyan Gu v. Da Hua Hu, Ace INA Insurance Company Canada opinion (ED100001), the Eastern District of the Missouri Court of Appeals reversed the trial judge’s summary judgment award in favor of defendant insurer.

Facts of the underlying cases:  Husband and wife  were passengers in a truck rented to haul grapes and carrots between California and Ontario.  Defendant Ace INA Insurance Company of Canada wrote the Garage Automobile Policy which insured the Volvo dealership which rented a tractor truck to the driver (who opted not to purchase insurance coverage on the rental).  However, the garage policy covered additional insureds if that person [the driver] operated any automobile in connection with the business of the dealership, and the court so found since the renting of the truck furthered the business of the dealership.

Note that this is the third trial thus far in this case: the first, a bench trial for personal injuries of the husband and for loss of consortium by his wife  against the trucking companies and the driver.  The court awarded husband nearly $14 million and  wife $1.5 million.

The second trial, judge-tried also, was by husband  only for equitable garnishment on the garage policy issued to  the dealer by defendant Ace INA.  On the first day of trial, the defense moved to amend its pleadings to assert the exclusion in the policy that applied when the ” automobile is being used . . . for the carrying of goods or materials for compensation.”  The court ultimately ruled that such late assertion of the defense was unfair, and denied the motion for leave to add that defense.  Judgment resulted in favor of husband against Ace INA Insurance Company on his garnishment action.

This brings us to the third case which is the subject of this appeal–another equitable garnishment case against Ace INA to obtain payment of the personal injury judgment but this time brought by the wife.  This time around, the defense timely raised the carriage-of-goods exclusion, and the trial judge upheld that defense in granting summary judgment in favor of insurer Ace INA.

On appeal, wife argued that collateral estoppel and/or res judicata barred the insurer from raising the carriage-of-goods exclusion.  The court of appeals rejected the collateral estoppel agrument because that exclusion/defense was not “fully and fairly litigated” in the first garnishment case by husband.

Next, the Eastern District focused on res judicata.  For that doctrine to apply, these four “identities” must co-exist: 1) of the thing sued for; 2) of the cause of action; 3) of the persons/parties; 4) of the quality of the person for or against whom the claim is made.  The fourth identity was undisputed, so the the court analyzed the first three.

The Thing Sued For:  In the court’s eyes, both garnishment cases–that of husband and wife–sought the same thing–“[g]arnishment of insurance proceeds to satisfy a judgment that stems from damages caused by the same motor vehicle accident.  No problem finding this element.

The Cause of Action:   This element is defined as “the underlying facts combined with the law, giving a party a right to a remedy of one form or another based thereon.”   Again, a finding that this element existed since “no different or new facts were required” for [wife] to establish her garnishment case.

The Parties:  This element requires that the parties be the same or in privity.   For privity to exist, the interests of a party and non-party in privity must have been so “closely intertwined that the non-party can fairly be considered to have had his or her day in court.”  Here, this element existed due to Missouri law holding that a judgment creditor “stands in the shoes’ of the judgment debtor, and thus wife has the same rights as the driver under the garage insurance policy from Ace INA.

Since all four identities coexisted, the trial judge erred in allowing insurer Ace INA to raise this defense.  The court of appeals therefore reversed and remanded for entry of judgment in favor of wife.

(Side note:  Res judicata  applies to claims or defenses that could have been raised previously, as well as those which were.)

 

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

http://www.kurthking.com

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy

Family Law

General Matters

 

 

 

 

New “MOTIVATING Factor” Standard In Missouri For Employment Discrimination and Retaliation Cases

With the amendments to the Missouri Human Rights Act, effective August 2017, the contributing factor standard is no more. 

Claimants now must meet a MOTIVATING FACTOR standard.  “Motivating factor” means “the employee’s protected classification actually played a role in the adverse action or decision and had determinative influence on the adverse decision or action.”   See section 213.010(19), RSMo.

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missour

816.781.6000

http://www.kurthking.com

 

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy

Family Law

General Matters

November 18, 2013

Unusual Varieties of Income for Child Support Calculations

Filed under: Divorce,Family Law,Paternity,Support — kurthking @ 9:23 pm
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Here is a list of some out-of-the-ordinary sources of gross income for child support calculations in Missouri–from Heckman v. Heckman, Slip Opinion WD75676 (October 15, 2013):

1.  Salary, of course

2.  Dividends, capital gains, annuities, pension and retirement benefits–but the increase in value of stock is GENERALLY NOT included unless it is liquidated so as to result in capital gain (Gordon v. Gordon, 924 S.W.2d 529, 533 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996))–HOWEVER, the employee’s sale of restricted stock issued by company to employee as part of compensation package may be treated as dividends and included in gross income–p. 8 of Heckman

3.  Pre-tax “flex plan benefits”–citing Fulton v. Adams, 924 S.W.2d 548, 554 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996); but not employer contributions to retirement plan, Roberts v. Roberts, 847 S.W.2d 108, 109 (Mo. Ct. App. 1992)

4.  Rent received is included–Graves v. Graves, 967 S.W.2d 632,641 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998)

5.  The value of new stock issued as part of annual compensation package–even if it is restricted stock that vests over a time span of years, at least where the amount that vests each year may be averaged or there is some other reasonable method for considering past, present, and anticipated restricted stock earnings–pp. 7-8 of Heckman slip opinion

6.  The employee’s sale of restricted stock issued by company to employee as part of compensation package may be treated as dividends and included in gross income–p. 8 of Heckman

7.  Company stock purchased with funds which would otherwise have been received as compensation is included–p. 9 of Heckman

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

Family Law–Dissolution of Marriage, Modification, Paternity–Child Custody, Support, Visitation

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, General Matters

Error to Order Plaintiff to Authorize Ex Parte Communications with Treating Physician

Missouri courts clearly hold that it is error for a trial court to order the plaintiff to sign an authorization consenting to ex parte communications with his treating physician.

See Judge Van Amburg’s opinion in State of Missouri ex rel. John Joseph Camillo and Mignon Chismarich v. Honorable James Beck, Slip Opinion ED100427 (October 15, 2013).

Of note:  “An authorization compelled in the course of litigation must be narrowly tailored to protect against ‘the potential risks to the physician-patient relationship’ inherent in the disclosure of confidential medical information.  [Citation omitted.]  Vague, broad, or open-ended authorizations simply will not do.”

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, Family Law

Worker’s Dependents Entitled to His Workers’ Compensation for Their Lifetimes

This post dovetails prior posts regarding Missouri Workers’ Compensation law involving death by other causes of a Permanently Totally Disabled (PTD) worker and the “Schoemehl window.”

The Southern District of the Missouri Court of Appeals recently addressed an appeal by the Second Injury Fund in a case where the PTD employee with a claim within the Schoemehl window died from causes not related to the injury.   The case is Spradling v. Treasurer of the State of Missouri as Custodian of the Second Injury Fund, Slip Opinion SD31907 (November 5, 2013), and holds specifically for cases within these parameters that the dependents of the deceased PTD worker whose claim was pending and not finally determined as of June 26, 2008 are entitled to the PTD compensation payments FOR THE LIFETIME OF THE DEPENDENT(S).

Note that the employee died from causes unrelated to his injury in November 2005 after having been injured in 1998 and having filed his claim in 1998.  On the date of injury, he was the non-custodial father of two young children who were “conclusively presumed” under 287.240(4) to be his dependents.

Note too that this case falls within the “Schoemehl Window” opened by the Missouri Supreme Court in Schoemehl on January 9, 2007, and continuing until June 26, 2008, when Missouri lawmakers closed the window by revising Missouri workers’ compensation law so that PTD in such a case terminates upon the death of the injured employee.

The bottom line is that in Schoemehl window cases the employer has to pay PTD so long as a dependent lives, but if the claim falls after that window closed the employer only has to pay only so long as the employee lives.

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

Workers’ Compensation, Personal Injury

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy for Debtors, General Matters

Family Law–Dissolution of Marriage, Modification, Paternity, Child Custody, Support, & Visitation

HOW TO GET YOUR PROPERTY BACK AFTER DIVORCE AND IN OTHER CASES–Missouri’s 511.310

Filed under: Divorce,Family Law,Litigation,Uncategorized — kurthking @ 3:13 pm
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Missouri law 511.310, RSMo 2013, seems to be a rarely used, straight forward way to recover for property that the ex-spouse fails to return as ordered in a divorce judgment.  However, the law does not limit itself to divorce judgments and applies generally. That statute provides:

“511.310. Damages in lieu of performance of judgment

When complete justice cannot otherwise be done, the court may, on the petition of the party entitled to the benefit of a final judgment, cause an inquiry to be made by a jury of the amount of damages which ought to be paid in lieu of the performance of the judgment, and may render a judgment for the damages so assessed, and award execution thereon.”

Perhaps an advisory jury would suffice instead of a full-blown jury trial.

In any event, 511.310 may be a viable and effective alternative to actions for contempt of court and conversion of property.

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri

816.781.6000

Family Law–Child Custody, Support, Visitation, Dissolution of Marriage, Modifications, Paternity

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, General Matters

September 30, 2013

Child Must Have Been Incapacitated At 18 For Child Support To Continue

Filed under: Divorce,Family Law,Support — kurthking @ 8:52 pm
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When does a parent pay child support for a child over age 18 but unable to care for himself/herself?

In Bright v. Bright989 S.W.2d 196 (Mo. Ct. App. S.D. 1999), the child did not become disabled until he became mentally ill during his first semester in college.   The child withdrew from college before the end of that semester and father ceased paying child support.   The child committed suicide over a year later–two months before his 22nd birthday–being incapacitated and unable to provide for his necessities due to his illness.  The mother later sued the father for child support for the months after the child withdrew from college, funeral and medical expenses of the child, and her attorneys fees.  The trial court compassionately awarded mother the relief she requested but the court of appeals reversed, taking it all away except the attorneys fees award.

The appellate court found little or no evidence that the child was incapacitated at age 18.  Father’s duty to continue to pay child support after the child reached age 18 was based solely upon the child attending college.  When the child withdrew from college that basis for father to continue to pay child support ceased.

Looking to Missouri’s 452.340 (subsections 3 and 4), the court found no intent that Missouri lawmakers intended to restart child support after it terminates by law.  Had the child simply gone on work a job after turning 18, no one would argue that a parent should have to recommence paying child support if the child later became incapacitated.  Likewise, no child support would be due from a parent if a 50, 60, or 70 year old child of that parent became incapacitated.  In order that the law be uniformly fair, the court could not in good conscience give the mother of the mentatlly incapacitated child in this case any back child support for those months after the obligation to support the child terminated by law.

Thus, the court of appeals reads 452.340.4 as granting a court the power to order child support of a mentally or physically incapacitated child to continue ONLY IF the child is so incapacitated on his or her 18th birthday.

As for the child’s medical and funeral expenses, the court found no Missouri law obligating a parent to pay for the such expenses of their child when that child is no longer a minor.

But the court left in place the trial court’s award of attorneys fees in favor of wife.  Given the novel questions of law, and the father’s much greater income, the court of appeals found no abuse of discretion in the award of fees to mother.

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

Family Law, Divorce, Modifications, Paternity; Child Support, Visitation, & Custody

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy for Debtors

http://www.kurthking.com

August 22, 2013

The Open and Obvious Defense in Slip and Fall Cases in Missouri

Plaintiff Julie Holzhauzen filed a premises liability case against the St. Louis Cardinals  to recover for personal injuries she suffered when she slipped and fell 20-30 feet from an embankment owned by the Cardinals onto the below-grade Metrolink light rail track area operated by Metro (the other defendant).  The trial court granted defense motions for summary judgment on grounds that the dangerous condition was open and obvious.  Plaintiff appealed to the Eastern District of the Missouri Court of Appeals, resulting in its Opinion ED98252, dated August 13, 2013.

Holzhauzen fell when she attended the Cardinals 2006 parade and rally celebrating the team’s 2006 World Series victory.  Short in stature, this lady found her way to the ledge that dropped off to the Metrolink tracks.  Someone bumped her as she started to take a step and she lost her balance and fell to the tracks below.

Of note was her testimony that she was distracted, looking toward the street to see the parade, and failed to see the drop-off although her view of it was unobstructed.  (Page 3)

On appeal seeking to reverse summary judgment in favor of defendants, the injured plaintiff argued: 1) the dangerous drop-off was not “known or obvious”; and, 2) as the possessor of the premises, the Cardinals have anticipated that the dangerous condition will cause physical harm to the invitee plaintiff even though it is known or obvious–i.e., was the invitee distracted so that she will not discover what is obvious, or would forget what she has discovered, or fail to protect herself against it, OR PROCEED TO ENCOUNTER THE KNOWN OR OBVIOUS DANGER BECAUSE TO A REASONABLE PERSON IN HER POSITION THE ADVANTAGES OF DOING SO WOULD OUTWEIGH THE APPARENT RISK.  (The court quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS, section 343A(1) (1965)–my emphasis.)  (Page 11 of the opinion)

In deciding the first issue of whether the drop-off was “known or obvious,” the court of appeals bluntly stated–“whether an invitee may or may not have seen an open and obvious dangerous condition is ‘totally irrelevant”–citing the Western District’s 2005 decision in Crow v. Kansas City Power & Light, 174 S.W.3d 523, 537.  (Page 9)  So much for plaintiff’s argument that the drop-off was not “known” to her as Missouri law simply cares not a wit whether she knew of the dangerous condition.  Rather, the issue is whether the invitee plaintiff “should have reasonably seen the condition.”  Thus, the focus is not a subjective one focused on what each particular invitee actually noticed, but rather a objective test of what was open and obvious to a reasonable person.  Since the drop-off here was truly open and obvious, the court of appeals disagreed with Holzhauzen on her first point.  (Page 11)

Next, the appellate court examined whether some exception applied to excuse the plaintiff from proceeding on to encounter the dangerous condition.  Here, plaintiff gave three reasons why the court should not apply the general rule that the possessor of the premises is not liable to invitees injured by open and obvious conditions, those being: 1) Distraction; 2) Advantage Outweighing Risk; 3) Anticipation of Harm.  The court refuted each of these three.

With regard to Distraction, illustrations 2 and 4 to comment f to section 343A of the RESTATEMENT OF TORTS describe situations when this argument is a viable reason why the possessor of the premises is held liable even when the dangerous condition is open and obvious.  Too, Missouri case law so holds.  See Bruner v. City of St. Louis, 857 S.W.2d 329 (Mo. Ct. App.  E.D. 1993) (person on moving walkway did not see its end because of airport distractions along the walkway and the presence of others on the walkway blocking the view).  However, in Holzhausen’s case, the ledge from which she fell was behind pipes that she ducked through to reach a ledge that was not intended for her use.  A possessor of the premises would not have reason to expect that an invitee would clamber through large pipes and be so distracted by events behind them that they would fail to see and avoid the drop-off to the tracks from the back of the ledge.  Contention therefore denied.  (Pages 12-13)

Plaintiff’s second pitch was also called out of the legal strike zone, as the advantage of walking next to a steep embankment to see the parade and rally certainly do not outweigh the risk of falling off that embankment.  (Pages 13-14)

Perhaps plaintiff’s most logical supposition was that the Cardinals should have anticipated due to the crush of many fans in a limited space, that some would (and apparently did) find their way to this ledge at the edge of the viewing area.  Here the court found the “critical question” to be whether the Cardinals could reasonably rely on their invitees such as Holzhausen to protect themselves from the danger presented by the ledge and drop-off.  The invitee must use ordinary “perception, intelligence and judgment,” which in this case the plaintiff simply failed to do.  (Pages 14-15)

What do we take from this case?  Maybe its discussion of the exceptions to the Open and Obvious defense–the distractions such as cars passing over the crack or hole in the road that we don’t see before stepping into it on the way to the front doors of a store.  Or perhaps that the law allows us to navigate an open and obvious condition if there is no other good way to get to where we are going.  Or, there is an emergency or urgent situation where the benefit of taking the dangerous route outweighs the harm.  The Open and Obvious defense has its holes!

Kurt H. King

Law Office of Kurt H. King, 20 E. Franklin, Liberty, Clay County, Missouri 64068

816.781.6000

Personal Injury, Workers’ Compensation, General Matters

www.kurthking.com

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