Plaintiff (Bostic) was injured when he partially fell through plywood boards that covered a trench and served as a temporary sidewalk. The trench had been dug by defendant Henkels and McCoy, Inc. (H
I.
In 1994, as part of the Green Line Metro construction, H & M was hired by Washington Gas to reposition gas lines along the new Metro construction route. As part of the work, H & M would dig trenches and sometimes cover them temporarily with 4’ wide by 8’ long plywood boards laid end to end to serve as temporary sidewalks. 2 On the evening of August 10, 1994, Bostic was walking home in the Columbia Heights area of Northwest Washington where H & M had a covered trench. He testified that, after stopping to talk and joke with his aunt inside a nearby courtyard, he entered Fourteenth Street and began walking toward his apartment, which required him to use the temporary plywood sidewalk covering the trench. As he described it, the plywood had been there for “several months” and was “just scattered around ... covering the trench over the sidewalk.... [T]he plywood boards ... [were] just scattered ... over top of each other.” Nails were protruding from the plywood, but, in his recollection, “the edges of the plywood [had never been] fastened to the edge of the trench.” Bostic walked a few steps on the plywood but then lost his footing, and one of his legs fell into the trench up to his kneecap through a hole in the covering. An eyewitness, Willie Diggins, came to his aid and saw a six to seven inch gap between two of the boards where Bostic had fallen. Diggins confirmed that the boards had nails sticking up out of them, and he saw no safety cones, plastic taping, or caution signs in the vicinity of the trench. A supervisor for Washington Gas, called to the scene that night, testified that he “saw a lot of plywood lying around on the sidewalk ... pushed back from over the trench,” covering “just one spot” of it.
II.
Bostic called no officers or employees of H & M as witnesses, and offered no proof of the contractual agreement between Washington Gas and H & M. He likewise called no expert witness and introduced no regulations or other published standards on what constituted due care in the present setting. In directing a verdict for H
&
M at the end of Bostic’s case, the trial court pointed first to the lack of “sufficient testimony as to ... what was required
III.
“A directed verdict is proper only if there is no evidentiary foundation, including all rational inferences from the evidence, by which a reasonable juror' could find for the party opposing the motion, considering all the evidence in the light most favorable to that party.”
Pazmino v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth.,
Courts elsewhere too have recognized that, regardless of its contractual arrangements, an independent contractor may be liable to the public for injuries of the sort Bostic suffered. In
Hickman v. Parks Constr. Co.,
The general rule ... which governs where a party is responsible for a dangerous place, agency, instrumentality, or operation likely to cause injury or damage to persons or property rightfully in its proximity, is that he is charged with the duty of taking due and suitable precautions to avoid injury or damage to such person or property, and his failure to take such precautions constitutes negligence.
This rule[,] applied to exeavations[,] requires a contractor making an excavation on property of another to provide such protection as would guard persons rightfully on the property against any contingency that was reasonably to be anticipated.
The defendant could not be relieved from its responsibility to protect against the danger from the open excavation by reliance upon Major Morrow to protect against that danger. The person on whom the duty devolves is not excused from taking the necessary precautions by contracting with or relying on others to take necessary precautionary measures.
Id.
at 409-10 (citations omitted).
See also Chance v. Lawry’s, Inc.,
Regardless of its contract with Washington Gas, H
&
M owed a duty to pedestrians such as Bostic lawfully using the sidewalk to protect them against the hazards created by the trench and temporary covering. In this regard, its duty was like that of any “owner or
occupier
of land” to exercise “reasonable care under all of the circumstances” to “a person lawfully upon his premises.”
Croce v. Hall,
The trial court also directed a verdict because of the absence of proof “of what standards [of care] should be used to cover ... trenches” like the one involved here. To the extent this entailed a conclusion that only expert testimony could supply those standards, we do not agree, at least where there was no proof of the unusual character of the trench in question or the defect alleged. When a matter falls “within the realm of common knowledge and everyday experience, a plaintiff will not need expert testimony to establish a standard and a deviation.”
District of Columbia v. Shannon,
In
District of Columbia v. Shannon, supra,
for example, a young girl had her thumb torn off when it got caught in a hole in a playground slide. Concluding that a jury from its own knowledge and experience was capable of assessing the relative dangerousness of a slide, we held that the case “could have gone to the jury without expert testimony establishing a special standard of care for maintainers of playgrounds higher than the duty of reasonable care owned by any landlord to someone lawfully on the property.”
H & M further argues that, expert testimony aside, Bostic “did not offer any municipal regulations or practices and procedures in the construction industry to provide the jury with a measure for evaluating the contractor’s activities.” This argument seems to us no stronger than the previous one.
See, e.g., King v. Pagliaro Bros. Stone Co.,
[I]f it is within the competence of people of affairs generally to make [the] judgment in a given case [that a party failed to act reasonably in the circumstances], the jury may make it even though there is no proof or statute or regulation in the case that points directly to any specific precaution that could reasonably have been taken and even though the jury themselves are not satisfied as to the precise nature of what ought to have been done. In this sense the jury need not fix or agree on a standard of conduct of precautions to be taken, but need only find that the conduct of the party falls short of any standard that they would agree on as reasonable.
Harper, James and Gray, the Law of Torts § 17.1, at 544-45 (2d ed.1986) (emphasis in original).
Finally, H
&
M argues — and the trial court agreed — that Bostic presented no evidence that H & M had actual or constructive knowledge of the defect in the covering that caused Bostic’s fall.
See Marinopoliski v. Irish,
IV.
Along with the other grounds on which it moved for a directed verdict, H & M argued that Bostic had been contributorily negligent and assumed the risk as a matter of law, in light of testimony that he had told others he was walking backwards at the time of the accident and his own testimony that he was walking in an area he knew to be under construction. H & M renews these contentions as cross-appellant. On the evidence presented, the trial court concluded that both defenses presented jury questions. We agree.
Bostic had indeed told others before trial (including hospital personnel) that at the time he fell he was “walking backwards, rapidly.” But he explained at trial that this had occurred before the accident, when he was leaving the courtyard of his aunt’s home having jokingly snatched some money from her hand; and that he turned and was facing forward on Fourteenth Street when he stepped onto the plywood and fell. Willie Diggins also testified that Bostic was facing forward when he fell. Which of Bostic’s accounts of his position at the time of the fall to believe (if either of them) was obviously a matter for the jury.
Similarly, whether Bostic was negligent in not choosing an alternate pedestrian route and instead walking over the boards in a known construction site was a factual question, given the evidence that no prohibitory or warning signs were in the area and his testimony that changing routes to his home would have taken him “two and a half blocks out of the way.”
See Lynn v. District of Columbia,
Reversed.
Notes
. He did not sue Washington Gas.
. Although no one testified precisely on this point, H & M did not dispute that, as the party that dug the trenches, it also covered them over with boards when not working in them. Thus, in opening statement, counsel for H & M admitted that ‘‘[i]f we weren’t completed with a particular area, we would cover the area over with plywood boards.”
See Goodman
v.
Sears Roebuck Co.,
