Respondent fell into a coal hole in a sidewalk in St. Louis, and this appeal is from a judgment for *97$8388. she recovered against the city for damages. for injuries she suffered.
There was evidence tending to show that while respondent was walking in front of 1006 Olive street, one of the principal streets of the city of St. Louis, she stepped upon the cover of a coal hole; that the cover tilted and she fell into the opening, sustaining serious injuries ; that the sidewalk was granitoid except a block of stone about three and one-half feet square, through which the coal hole had been cut; that the cover of the coal hole was a round iron plate; that an opening in the stone was cut down about the thickness of this plate and then a “shoulder” of stone was left upon which it was intended this plate should rest; that the diameter of the plate was about an inch less than the diameter of the opening in the stone above the shoulder upon which the plate or cover rested, and thát the shoulder, itself was about an inch across; that- for several years before respondent was injured, and as far back as respondent’s witnesses had observed the place, the coal-hole cover had been seen to slip and tilt and slide out of place when stepped upon; that there was a hole in the center of the plate and an iron pin therein, but there was no fastening or appliance designed to hold the plate or cover in place; that one police officer on the beat had been notified directly of the condition of the coal hole; that other officers on the beat had examined the coal hole a number of timos; some of these, testifying for appellant, said they examined the coal hole but found it secure. There was also evidence that the pin through the center of the cover whs placed therein for the purpose of holding the cover in place by means of a wooden bar through which the $in was designed to run and which was held against the /lower side of the stone by a nut upon the lower end of the pin. There was evidence pro and con upon the question whether any such bar had been in use during several years prior to the time respondent was injured. Numerous errors are assigned.
*98Testimony. I. It is urged the record indicates Kuehn testified falsely concerning the notice he said he gave Officer Reagan of the defective condition of the coal-hole cover, and then it is insisted this should work a reversal the judgment and a remandment of the cause. The motion for new trial makes no complaint of this sort. Kuehn was testifying some ten years after the injury to respondent occurred and previously had given substantially the same testimony several times. There was ample opportunity to investigate the truth of his story. There was nothing inherently improbable in it. The fact that the officer he claimed to have notified died prior to the first trial and the fact that Kuehn*s brother, tenant of the'property, was not joined as a defendant, do not necessarily render Kuehn’s testimony untrue. His credibility was for the jury and the trial court, and doubtless the argument now made to us was pressed upon their attention with a view to destroying the weight of his testimony before the jury. This was its proper function. With the witness before them neither trial judge nor jury seem .to have detected perjury.
UnwoThny ofnBe°Nef.y II. It is insisted the testimony of plaintiff and her witnesses is unworthy of belief and that the judgment should be reversed for this reason. In support of this contention the case of Fagg v. Railroad, 185 Mo. App. l. c. 84, 85, is cited. This was a case in which the court applied the rule\ that one who is injured on a railroad crossing 'and testifies he kept a lookout for approaching trains wdll be held guilty of contributory negligence, despite his testimony, when the situation was such that he must ha\ie seen the train which injured him if he looked at al|That rule is not applicable here. The fact that manj\ persons passed over the coal hole without injury and that'. several testified positively the cover was not defective ' and the testimony of plaintiff and her witnesses as to the defective condition thereof simply made a question of fact for solution by the jury.
*99Defect-Notice.' III. Another contention is that the defect was a latent one and that the city had no actual notice and that the exercise of ordinary care would not have brought it notice thereof. The cases cited in support of ^his Position have previously been dealt with in circumstances very like those confronting us on this record. [Drake v. Kansas City, 190 Mo. l. c. 379 et seq.] The defects complained of in this case are sufficiently like those in the Drake case to make the rule there applied applicable here. So far as notice is concerned, the defect being a structural one, the city is charged with notice from the beginning. [Drake v. Kansas City, supra, l. c. 384.] Further, had it been necessary, there is evidence of both actual and constructive notice. So far as concerns the evidence tending to show that a method of fastening the coal-hole coyer was provided, that is disposed of by the principle announced by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in dealing with a case in which the testimony showed a fastening had been provided like that appellant contends was in use in this case. That court in Keating v. Boston, 206 Mass. l. c. 330, 331, said:
“If it were impossible to construct a coal-hole cover which would not tip up when stepped upon unless fastened from within, a different question would be presented from that which we have to pass upon. But it is a matter of common knowledge that coal-hole covers set in iron collars, although unfastened, remain firm and in place when trodden upon. Sewer covers and the covers of other manholes leading to conduits under public streets cannot be fastened from within and for that reason are always — or at least almost always — -set in an iron collar, and when so set do not tip up when trodden upon.
“The city had notice that the coal hole was in the sidewalk. That made it its duty to use due diligence to protect the traveling public from that hole, and the question is whether it has used due diligence, if the only protection against the hole is a cover which will tip up *100if stepped upon unless fastened; or, to state it in another way, the question is whether in the exercise of due diligence the city can allow such a coyer to remain, relying on the occupant of the abutting house to fasten it. We can have no doubt that in case of the covers of manholes in the street which cannot be fastened from within a finding would be warranted that a cover which tipped up when trodden upon was a danger which a city would not allow if it used reasonable diligence. The question is not what view we take upon the question which arose in the case, but what view a jury could take upon it. We are of opinion that a jury is warranted in finding that a coal-hole cover which when trodden upon will tip up unless fastened is so likely to be unfastened that a city which used reasonable diligence after it had or in the exercise of proper care might have had notice of this condition would not allow it to be there at all.”
This case was cited with approval in Campbell v. Chillicothe, 239 Mo. l. c. 461.
It is said notice to police officers was not notice to the city under the rule in Carrington v. St. Louis, 89 Mo. 208; Willis v. St. Joseph, 184 Mo. App. 428, and Haxton v. Kansas City, 190 Mo. l. c. 67, because it was not shown such officers were the officers on duty on their beats at the time. In the first place, the contention is disposed of by the fact that the defect was of structural character, and, therefore, the city is held to have had notice from the beginning, as already pointed out. Again, there was evidence tending to show notice was given Eeagan while he was assigned to this beat and while he was in uniform, and there is evidence he wore his uniform only when on duty. Further, there was evidence police officers on duty on the beat examined this coal hole. They testified it was secure. The jury were free to reject this part of their testimony and find that when they made the examination they found the condition respondent’s witnesses described. There was ample evidence of actual notice, aside from that implied from the character of the defect respondent contends caused her injury.
*101Contributory IV. It is contended respondent was, as a matter of law, guilty of contributory negligence. Tbe city’s duty was to use ordinary care to keep the sidewalk in a reasonably safe condition for travel, in all the circumstances. Eespondent’s duty was to exercise ordinary care for her own safety. She was not, however, “bound to look for hidden dangers.” All that was required of her was that she walk with her eyes open, observing her “general course and in the usual manner.” [Earl v. Dlask, 126 Iowa, l. c. 365.] The question whether respondent exercised proper care was for the jury.
ónSNegMgence. V. An instruction for plaintiff told the jury, in sub-. stance, that if they found Olive Street to be a public street, improved as already described, and found the sidewalk contained a coal hole, constructand covered as above substantially set forth in the statement, and that it had been in place several years, and that respondent, in the use of ordinary care for her own safety, was walking along the sidewalk and stepped on the coal-hole cover and it slipped or tilted, and that thereby she was caused to fall and was injured and that “the cover or lid of said coal hole was at that time in an unsafe, insecure and dangerous condition;” and that the city knew or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known of the existence of said loose, unsafe, dangerous and insecure cover in time, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, to have made it safe and secure before plaintiff was injured, then the jury should find against the city.
It is urged the instruction required the city to make the sidewalk absolutely safe and secure, and fails to set out “correctly the duty of the city as to its sidewalks, namely, to keep them in a reasonably safe condition for travel in the ordinary modes by persons exercising ordinary care.” Such is counsel’s position.
If the jury found the coal hole and, therefore, the sidewalk to be in “an unsafe, insecure and dangerous” condition, this was equivalent to a finding that it was not *102reasonably safe. [Squiers v. Kansas City, 100 Mo. App. l. c. 631.] Other cases in the briefs support this view and show that this court has frequently assumed it to be correct. Another consideration is that appellant asked and secured instructions containing the same phraseology; and, further, other instructions pressed upon the attention of the jury the rule upon which appellant relies. The objection made is not tenable. The authorities cited by respondent fully support this conclusion.
instruction on Measure of Damages. VI. In the instruction on the measure of damages, given on its own motion, the trial court included as one of the elements of damage “the diminished ability of plaintiff to work and labor.” It is contended this is not an element for which a marrie¿ woman can recover. The cases cited hold (1) that recovery for loss of earnings cannot be permitted in the absence of evidence tending to show that such a loss resulted from the injury (Davidson v. Transit Co., 211 Mo. l. c. 346) and (2) impairment of ability to attend to the duties of her ordinary vocation (that of housewife) cannot be made the basis of recovery by a married woman. [Wallis v. Westport, 82 Mo. App. l. c. 527, 528.] The question was not involved in the Davidson case and is settled against appellant in Perrigo v. St. Louis, 185 Mo. l. c. 288 et seq., in which the Wallis case is discussed.
Pf coverdo'"9 coal Hole. VII. Appellant contends it was error to admit evidence tending to prove the coal-hole cover, pripr to the time of respondent’s injury, frequently had been observed to slip and tilt when passers-by stepped upon it. No eyidence any other person had been injured thereby was admitted. Appellant relies upon Goble v. Kansas City, 148 Mo. 470. The holding in that case is directly contrary to what was subsequently said in Charlton v. Railway, 200 Mo. l. c. 442, is opposed to the rule adhered to by the Supreme Court of the United States (District of Columbia v. Armes, 107 U. S. 519) and to that previ*103ously announced by the Kansas City Court of Appeals (Golden v. City of Clinton, 54 Mo. App. 100) and to the great weight of authority elsewhere. Besides, the evidence admitted in this case disclosed no previous injuries to anyone, but did tend to show that the effect of stepping upon the coal-hole cover was to cause it to slip and tilt, and, consequently, to show the existence of a dangerous condition. Globe v. Kansas City, 148 Mo. 470, in so far as it conflicts with this view, is overruled.
Testimony?1 YTIt. Appellant complains that the court excluded answers to questions propounded to Mr. and Mrs. Kuehn, on cross-examination, as to whether the coal hole which injured plaintiff was similar to coal holes generally in place in the city sidewalks. No showing was made that the Kuehns knew the condition of other coal holes in the city generally, nor do counsel assert that the record shows what the witnesses would have said had they been permitted to answer. In such circumstances it is not necessary to discuss the question whether evidence as to other coal holes was admissible.
Reporting Ordinances. IX. There was no error in admitting the ordinances of the city defining the duties of police officers with respect to reporting defects in streets. The objection made to this that the city is not liable for damages for the violation of its ordinances seems to arise out of a misconception of the purpose for which the ordinances were offered. In addition, appellant made independent oral proof by its witnesses of the duty of officers to report defective sidewalks, proving the practice under the ordinance and proving it for the purpose of showing no report was made, relying upon the absence of a report as evidence tending to show there was no defect in the coal hole. The point is ruled against appellant.
*104Verdfct.Ve *103X. Finally, it is insisted the damages are excessive. This case was tried several times. The trial resulting *104in the judgment from which this appeal was taken occurred about ten years after respondent was injured. Immediately following her fall, she was confined to her bed for seven months or more. Many times thereafter she was in a like helpless condition for days. When injured she ivas thirty-five years old and a strong, active woman in good health. Thereafter she suffered great pain almost constantly and was unable to remain in any one position for any considerable time. She could not sit or lie down over an hour at a time. She did not sleep well. Her spinal cord was injured so that her lower limbs were partially paralyzed and she could not walk without crutches and not well with them. Needles stuck into her limbs caused her no pain. There was evidence tending to show that an operation could not be performed except at the risk of her life and then without any certainty of benefit to her in case she survived; that her injuries were permanent and that she had grown worse, as time went on, instead of better. Her back pained her almost constantly and quite severely. As to her injury and its effect upon her, respondent is corroborated by numerous witnesses, professional and lay. The great weight of the evidence supports her claim that she has suffered a very serious injury which has crippled her for life and continues to cause her continuous suffering without much hope of its alleviation in the future. In these circumstances, the judgment cannot be said to be excessive. It is affirmed.
All concur.