This is an appeal from the grant of a summary judgment in favor of the defendants in a joint action by a father and child against a husband and wife, homeowners, seeking to recover damages for injuries received by the child when she stepped into a hole in defendants’ front yard. Hospital and doctor’s bills were sought to be recovered by the father of the child. The hole in question was placed by a municipal water department when it installed water lines to the house from the main in the street; it was about 11 feet from the edge of the street. There were no sidewalks. In the bottom of the hole was the water cutoff valve. The walls of the hole consisted of a terracotta pipe in the shape of a square with rounded corners and, as testified to by the child, was of a diameter longer than a pencil but shorter than one foot. The affidavit of the husband disclosed that the grass had been recently cut and that the lawnmower would run over the terracotta pipe when it was used to cut the grass; and that the terracotta pipe extended one and one-half to one and three-fourths inches above the ground. He further testified that immediately after the child was injured, he ex *227 amined the area and that the grass did not obscure or hide the hole and that the hole could plainly be seen. The child’s testimony was that the pipe was even with the ground; that the edges of the pipe were covered with grass "and you couldn’t see it”; that the grass had grown just around the edges of the pipe so there was a hole in the ground that the grass had not covered over. She further stated that all other yards in the neighborhood had a similar installation, some with the pipe extending above the ground and some even with the ground, including her own yard. She was pushing her bike at the time and was looking ahead instead of at the ground and did not see the hole. The child further testified that she and other children frequently used the yard as a passageway while going to and from school, there being no sidewalks in the area; that both defendants had been there in the carport on occasions when children used the yard as a passageway, but she could not say whether they had ever seen them or not; but that she had never been invited into the yard or given permission to cross the yard by the Logans and had not been invited on the occasion in question. There was evidence the wife had made an out-of-court statement to the father of the child after the injury that she did not object to such use because there were no sidewalks and walking in the street was dangerous for the children. The husband’s affidavit disclosed that he had no knowledge of such use. There was no affidavit of testimony from the wife. There was no evidence showing that it was necessary to go in the area where the hole was in order to stay out of the street. In answer to interrogatories and a question as to the plaintiffs "contentions,” the father of the child, under oath in stating these contentions, said "the aperture, or opening, was completely concealed from view by grass which had grown up, around and over the aperture and it could not be seen upon ordinary observation and the edge of the aperture was broken, with sharp edges.” There was no evidence to this effect; but only to the contrary.
1. The first question for determination is the status of the child and the duty of the owner resulting from this status. The child was clearly not an invitee by express or implied invitation, and this is practically conceded by the
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parties. Mere acquiescence in the child coming upon the premises on a few prior occasions is not sufficient to convert her presence on the occasion in question from that of the trespasser or licensee to that of an invitee. See
McCall v. McCallie,
2. The following was held by this court in
Rowland v. Byrd,
3. The solution to this case, therefore, rests upon whether or not the open hole containing the cutoff valve otherwise constituted a hidden peril or mantrap so that the failure to keep it covered or to warn thereof would *230 constitute a wilful and wanton act as against the plaintiff child in the present case.
"The doctrine of mantrap or pitfall is rested upon the theory that the owner is expecting a trespasser or a licensee and has prepared the premises to do him injury. Moseley v. Alabama Power Co.,
The Crosby case cites a collection of cases involving holdings that certain situations did not constitute mantraps or pitfalls. See pp. 200, 201. The situation here was created by the municipal water department, not by the defendant. Similar installations existed over the entire area, even in the plaintiffs yard, and she knew of these installations but had never seen the particular one she stepped into in the defendant’s yard. While she stated "You couldn’t see it” her testimony disclosed this statement to be a mere conclusion. It disclosed she was not looking at the ground, but far ahead, as she walked across the yard. It also disclosed that the hole was not obscured, covered, or hidden. There is no mantrap situation in this case, nor is there any evidence that the acts of either the husband or the wife, or their inaction was either wilful or wanton. We accordingly hold that the trial court did not err in granting the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Judgment-affirmed.
