DocketNumber: Appeal, 134
Judges: Stern, Stearns, Jones, Bell, Cliidsey, Arnold
Filed Date: 5/23/1955
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion
In this suit in trespass plaintiff, Diomira DiMenna, sought to recover damages from the City of Philadelphia for injuries resulting from a fall on the south sidewalk of City Hall at a point some 35 feet east of the southern archway, about 15 feet from the building-line and 10 feet from the south curb. The jury returned a verdict in her favor in the sum of $3,000.
Plaintiff is an elderly lady who had lost the sight of one eye. At the time of the accident she was carrying a hand-bag and a bundle or shopping bag contain-, ing two small plants. She walked west from Juniper Street and had just turned to go south across South Penn Square. It was between 9:30 and 10 :30 o’clock in the morning of an April day; the weather was a little cloudy and it was somewhat dark. She claimed that where there was a joinder on the sidewalk of two
The testimony was not very clear in respect to the manner in which the accident happened. Plaintiff testified, not that she tripped or stubbed her toe, but that her left foot “slipped”; the court apparently inferred that this was caused by her straddling the line of joinder between the blocks and that her left foot dropped to the depressed block. There is also room for doubt as to whether she established that the defect complained of had existed for a sufficient length of time to have put the City upon constructive notice; a policeman testified that no repairs had been made on the sidewalk for weeks before the accident, but it might be questioned whether this established that any need for such repairs had existed for any given length of time before the happening of the accident.
Be this all as it may, the City, on its motion for judgment n.o.v., presses only the argument that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in that, walking in daylight, she should have observed the defect in the sidewalk and thereby avoided the accident. It is true that several excuses offered by plaintiff in that regard did not exculpate her from the duty of exercising proper care. She stated that
Judgment affirmed.
The police officer who was plaintiff’s witness testified that the elevation was one inch to one and one-half inches. He also testified, and the court apparently accepted his testimony, that the raised slab was to the east and the depressed block to the west. If this were so, however, it could not have been that, as plaintiff walked south along the higher block, her left foot slipped to the depressed level.