189 A. 608 | Conn. | 1937
The plaintiff, a boy eight years old, brought this action to recover for injuries received by him resulting from a fall from a narrow wooden beam, while he was walking along it in the course of his training and instruction in a public school of the defendant city. The complaint alleged that this beam, from its construction and use upon the slippery floor of the class room where he fell, constituted a nuisance. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed both from the refusal of the trial court to set that verdict aside and from the *427 judgment entered upon it. The defendant in its brief states that the questions raised all center around one contention, that the facts in the case do not show that the beam as it was constructed and used at the time the plaintiff fell constituted a nuisance.
The beam, called a balance beam, was used in the course of the regular physical education in the school. It was standard equipment used generally in the schools of the city and purchased from one of the leading manufacturers of such articles in the country. It was twelve feet long, the top being nine and three quarters inches and the bottom about three inches above the floor. The top of the beam was about two inches wide and slightly rounded. It had an iron support at each end, arched in shape and with two feet resting upon but not attached to the floor. The contact surface of each of the feet was curved, about two inches long over all and a quarter to a third of an inch wide; and the surface was smooth and had nothing to prevent its slipping on the floor. The beam was being used by children wearing ordinary shoes. There were no mats or pads along it. Its use in the school has been discontinued except out of doors. The jury might reasonably have found that the floor where the beam was placed had been oiled and was somewhat slippery; that this was the first time it had been used in that room during the school year; that the top of the beam had been varnished and was also slippery; and that, while the plaintiff under the supervision of his teacher was walking along it, it slipped on the floor to one side, causing him to fall. From these facts the jury could reasonably have concluded that the beam as used upon the floor of the class room, was likely to slip and cause any child upon it to fall and that it was a source of danger to the children using it.
The defendant claims that the only fault with which *428
it can be charged was negligence in the use of the beam upon the floor of the class room, without taking precautions to prevent its slipping. A nuisance may have its origin in negligence. Swift Co. v. Peoples Coal Oil Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.