DocketNumber: No. 7,286.
Judges: Angstman
Filed Date: 12/4/1934
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The complaint is insufficient. The proximate cause of plaintiff's injury, as fact allegations show, was her failure to use the safe way she had constructed and her act of stepping off of the same onto a dangerous and slippery path. The complaint shows, then, that her own acts caused her injury, and she must then allege facts exculpating herself from her own contributory negligence. This she failed to do. The dangerous condition was obvious. (Grazer v. Flanagan,
The evidence shows, without doubt, contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff which caused her injuries, and fails to show that she acted as a reasonable, prudent person would act under the circumstances, using due care for her own safety. It shows that she failed to use such care as a matter of law and there were no facts or issues to be properly submitted to the jury, and it was error to let the case go to the jury, as was done in this case, and either the motion for nonsuit or motion to direct verdict in favor of defendant, *Page 194
should have been granted. (45 C.J. 957; 20 R.C.L. 957; Gleason
v. Fire Protection Engineering Co.,
Offered, but refused, instruction No. 24 was proper for the reason that the evidence showed the conditions complained of existed for a long time prior to the leasing of the premises by respondent, and it further showed the defects were obvious. (O'Neil v. Christian,
Refused instruction No. 23 was warranted by the facts in this case and should have been given as the law on this point. (19 Cal. Jur. 583; 20 R.C.L. 14.)
The admission of a picture of plaintiff in evidence without first producing the person who took the picture, and showing the date thereof, was error. The picture was put in evidence to get sympathy for the plaintiff, and in fact, plaintiff never even testified that the picture was taken of her. In these days of trick photography, it is not asking too much of plaintiff to prove, where, when, and by whom a picture was taken, and that the party who took the picture testify as to the conditions under which it was taken, and that it represented a true picture of the actual conditions existing on the date taken. (West v.Wilson,
This case is a simple one, based upon the negligence of appellant in creating a nuisance on premises adjoining that of the defendant, and by reason of which nuisance respondent sustained injuries. The owner of a house abutting upon a private way which other abutting owners had a right to use in common, owed to all persons using the same a duty not to maintain his premises in such manner as to discharge water upon the sidewalk as to cause an accumulation of ice in the winter and was held liable to one injured by ice so produced. (Cavanagh v. Block,
Instruction No. 23, offered and rejected, is manifestly not the law. It makes knowledge of the dangerous condition on *Page 196
the part of the plaintiff absolutely determinative of the case. Such is not the law and it has been expressly held not to be the law in this state. (Cannon v. Lewis,
Refused instruction No. 24 deals with the relationship of landlord and tenant and was inapplicable to the facts of this case and is not a true statement of the law. The existence of a nuisance for a long time does not give a prescriptive right to the person creating the nuisance to continue the same. (Leahan
v. Cochran,
We cannot see how the photograph objected to can in any manner prejudice the rights of the appellant. The testimony of the witness relating to it was that the picture correctly showed the condition of the arm some time after he took the splints off the arm and some time between the date of the fracture and the date of the trial. Plaintiff in this action obtained a verdict and judgment against the defendant in the sum of $5,500 as damages for physical injuries sustained by her as a result of a fall upon a private roadway in the city of Butte. The complaint alleges, and the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, shows that she and her husband lived in a house situated on the rear of a lot and numbered 114 1/2 South Dakota Street. *Page 197 The premises were rented from Delia Cox, who occupied a rooming-house situated on the front of the lot and numbered 114 South Dakota Street. To the north of these premises were buildings held by defendant under lease from Marie Rimbaud. A high board fence separated the two lots. Defendant operated a dry cleaning establishment on the premises leased by it, and owned and operated several trucks. Defendant also maintained a garage and a wash-rack for washing cars, immediately north of the board fence. On the south of the fence there was a private roadway about eight feet wide, running east and west, with a gate at each end. The roadway was bounded on the north by the high board fence, and on the south, adjacent to the lot occupied by plaintiff, by a low fence. Garbage cans were placed in the driveway next to the high board fence for the use of plaintiff and the roomers in the rooming-house at 114 South Dakota Street. The roadway was used by plaintiff as a means of entrance to her home from Dakota Street, and as a means of going to and returning from her landlady's rooming-house on the front of the lot. The plaintiff's husband testified that prior to October 1, when the weather "was not bad," he made complaint to his landlady, to Rimbaud, and to someone "at the Paumie washrack * * * just asked him if he couldn't stop that water from running across the yard there." Whether or not the last-indicated person was an employee of the defendant, and whether or not he was then washing a car of any description, does not appear from the transcript. No complaint was made after the weather turned cold and ice formed on the roadway.
Plaintiff and her husband moved into the house at 114 1/2 South Dakota Street on September 11, 1931. Her husband made a pathway of ashes over the icy portion of the roadway for their use in going to Dakota Street, as well as to the garbage cans. On November 27, at 4 P.M., plaintiff proceeded to the home of Delia Cox, following as best she could the pathway made of ashes. The pathway was not discernible because snow had blown over it. She reached there in safety, stayed about five minutes and then attempted to return by the same *Page 198 route. On the return trip she fell and sustained the injuries of which she complains. As she started to leave the rooming-house in returning to her home, she said to herself, "My goodness, a person has to be careful not to fall." She said, "I kept walking slowly and carefully as I could, and before I knew it, I had fallen. * * * I was following where I believed this path to be at all times, and I was walking as carefully as I possibly could." She said, "By reason of this snow that had covered it, I could not observe exactly where the outlines of the path were." On cross-examination she said that, as she was about to return to her home from the Cox rooming-house, she said to herself, "I have to be careful or I will fall and break my neck some day." At the time she wore house slippers with leather soles and low heels.
The first point urged by defendant is that the complaint does[1, 2] not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The question was raised by general demurrer and by objection to the introduction of evidence. Briefly stated, defendant contends that, since it appears from the complaint that plaintiff knew of the dangerous condition of the roadway and made her own path with ashes, and since she knew the path was covered with snow so that it was not discernible, her act in attempting to use the pathway which she had constructed and in stepping off of it was the proximate cause of her injuries, and that in order to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, it was incumbent upon her to allege facts exculpating her from the imputation of contributory negligence.
Ordinarily, the defense of contributory negligence is one that must be pleaded and proved by defendant. (Birsch v. Citizens'Elec. Co.,
The rule as stated above in the Armstrong and other cases is undoubtedly correct, but it has no application to the facts here alleged. The fallacy of defendant's argument rests in the supposition that plaintiff's own act as pleaded in the complaint was prima facie the, or a, proximate cause of her injuries. From the complaint before us it does not appear that plaintiff did any act voluntarily that placed her in a place of known danger. According to the allegations of the complaint, she believed she was on the path made of ashes. She did not realize that she had stepped off of it until she had fallen. Moreover, had she voluntarily walked over the icy portion of the highway, she would not necessarily have been guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law.
It is true that more care is required in walking on an icy or[3] slippery walk or pavement than on others (McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, 2d ed., sec. 3011, note 20; City ofDenver v. Hubbard,
Here plaintiff had five minutes before her return trip passed over the pathway in safety. Nothing had intervened to change its condition. We cannot say, as a matter of law, that she was negligent in attempting the return trip, believing, as she alleged, that she was on the pathway which was covered with snow, but that she, "without fault on her part, stepped off of the same and onto the frozen surface of the ridged and slippery ice." The complaint does not, as matter of law, show presumptively that plaintiff's injuries were proximately caused by her own negligent act, calling for allegations exculpating her from the effects thereof, within the rule of the Armstrong Case and cases cited therein.
The next contention of defendant is that the evidence shows,[4] as a matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence barring recovery. The contention is that, since plaintiff knew of the dangerous condition of the roadway and appreciated the danger in attempting to pass over it, her own contributory negligence was the proximate cause of her injuries, and, hence, that she cannot recover. Whether plaintiff was in the exercise of due care for her own safety was a question for the jury to determine, even though she knew of the presence of ice and appreciated the danger incident to attempting to cross it. (Hynes v. Brewer,
We recognize that under certain facts the danger may be so obvious and of such magnitude that it must be held, as matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. Illustrative cases are the following: Gleason v. FireProtection Engineering Co.,
Under the evidence presented here, the issue of plaintiff's contributory negligence was one for the jury.
Defendant complains of the court's refusal to give offered[5] instruction No. 24, reading as follows: "You are instructed that every party, whether tenant or owner, may use his property as he sees fit in a lawful manner, and when a tenant rents premises, obvious defects, uses made thereof, and general surroundings are presumed to be known to them and the premises in absence of agreement are taken subject to such use and conditions." The instruction was properly refused. The right to maintain a nuisance cannot be gained by prescription. (Hynes v.Brewer, supra.) The fact that defendant had been negligent in causing water to run over the highway before and at the time plaintiff took a lease on her premises, would not affect plaintiff's right to recover damages. (Leahan v. Cochran,
Error is assigned in the refusal of the court to give[6] defendant's offered instruction No. 23, reading: "You *Page 203 are instructed that if you believe from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the plaintiff had knowledge of the dangerous condition, if any, and that defendant did not have knowledge of it or in the exercise of ordinary care could not have discovered the dangerous condition, then plaintiff cannot recover." This instruction should have been given. It went to the gist of the plaintiff's cause of action, which was grounded upon negligence.
The argument that there was circumstantial evidence adduced tending to show that the defendant in the exercise of reasonable care should have known that ice was forming on the roadway, only emphasizes the necessity for such an instruction. In view of the fact that there was no evidence that the plaintiff or her husband protested against the running of water over the roadway after October 1, and that there was no showing that notice was given the defendant that ice was forming, or had formed, on the roadway, coupled with the fact that the defendant denied that it washed cars on the open rack in freezing weather, the defendant was entitled to have the issue of negligence in this regard submitted to the jury under an appropriate instruction. Without it the defendant was deprived of a fair trial, and specious reasoning cannot alter the fact.
The subject matter of this instruction is not covered by any[7] instruction given. It is contended that instruction No. 9, given, which reads, in part, "plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence her charges of negligence against the defendant and that this negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, * * *" is sufficient on this point, if we read into it the charges of negligence contained in the complaint. This cannot be done, for no statement of the case was submitted to the jury; nor does it appear that counsel agreed to submit the pleadings with the instructions, and so far as the record discloses, the jury was not advised, in any manner, as to the "charges of negligence." There is some merit in the contention that the instruction should not have been restricted to knowledge on the part of the "defendant" *Page 204 alone, but should have advised the jury that knowledge of defendant's agents and employees constitutes knowledge of the defendant. In view of the fact that the defendant is a corporation, this omission could hardly have misled the jury had the instruction been given; and the instruction will doubtless be corrected on a retrial of the case.
Defendant assigns error in the admission of a photograph taken[8] of Mrs. Toole, showing her arm shortly after the splints were removed from it. The doctor who treated the plaintiff and who put the splints on and removed them, testified that the photograph shows the condition of the arm some time after he took the splints off. Defendant contends that, before this photograph should have been received in evidence, there should have been a showing made as to where, when and by whom it was taken.
It was, of course, immaterial where the picture was taken. As to the time when it was taken, the evidence discloses that it represented conditions as they existed some time between the time of the fracture and the time of the trial. This, we think, was sufficient as to the element of time. It was also immaterial who took the picture so long as it represented the actual condition of the arm at the time as testified to by the doctor. The court did not err in admitting the photograph in evidence. (CompareFulton v. Chouteau County Farmers' Co., ante, p. 48.)
It is contended that the verdict is excessive; but as a new trial must be had, no good purpose would be served in discussing that question. The remaining assignments of error relate to the giving and refusal of certain instructions other than those here considered. We have also considered these assignments and find that they are without merit. The opinion promulgated December 4 is withdrawn, and this opinion substituted.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court of Silver Bow county for a new trial.
Williams v. . City of New York ( 1915 )
Meallady v. City of New London ( 1933 )
City & County of Denver v. Willson ( 1927 )
Armstrong v. Billings ( 1929 )
Lucy v. City of Norwich ( 1919 )
Gleason v. Fire Protection Engineering Co. ( 1932 )
Reynolds v. Los Angeles Gas & Electric Co. ( 1912 )
Grant v. Chicago Etc. Ry. Co. ( 1927 )
Mullins v. City of Butte ( 1933 )