This is an appeal by the City of Hattiesburg from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Forrest County, which awarded damages in the sum of $10,000.00 to Mrs. Clydie Mae Hillman, Administratrix, on account of the alleged negligence of the City, resulting in the death of Brenda Hillman.
On March 3,1953, the Hillman family lived at 104 East-side Avenue in the City of Hattiesburg. Their next door neighbors, the C. D. McDonald family, lived at 106 East-side, where it is intersected by Katie Avenue. Katie Avenue is 50 feet wide. Approximately 20 feet in the center was graveled. This left a neutral ground of about 15 feet on each side, between the graveled portion and the street line. On the north neutral ground, and alongside the McDonald lot, stood three large oak trees ranging in diameter from 18 to 24 inches.
Little Brenda Hillman, two and a half years of age, about 3 o’clock that afternoon, had been playing with one or two other children on the north side of the house. Jerry McDonald walked around to the south side of the yard and Brenda followed. She was standing between the house and the second tree. Suddenly a large limb, 8 or 9 inches in diameter, 18 or 20 feet long, weighing about 200 pounds, broke off of the oak tree and fell 12 or 14 feet upon the child with such force that her skull was fractured. She was thereafter unconscious until death ensued about 2 hours later.
The wind was blowing as it does on an ordinary March day, but no other limbs fell in the area on that occasion.
The evidence was undisputed that the tree leafed out in the spring of 1951, but shortly thereafter died. The limbs had become rotten. When it was removed, follow
The City, in its request for a peremptory instruction in the court below contended in effect, as it contends here, that although Katie Avenue was dedicated as a 50 foot street, the city opened and invited the public to use only 20 feet; that there were no sidewalks and therefore no occasion for anyone to use the neutral ground; that the title to the tree was vested in McDonald, the abutting property owner, and the City was under no duty to remove it without his permission; and that it knew nothing about the dangerous condition of the tree. Besides the wind blew the limb down, and that was an act of God.
It is well settled that a municipality is under the duty to exercise reasonable care to keep its streets reasonably safe for those using them with reasonable care. City of West Point v. Barry,
It is also true that while the title to trees standing in the neutral ground is vested in the adjacent property owner, beyond doubt a municipality, in the exercise of reasonable care for the safety of persons and property in and near its dedicated streets, has the right and is under the duty to remove them, if they are dangerous. Brahan v. Meridian Home Telephone Co.,
Likewise it can now be said that there is no good reason why a municipality should not be liable for damages to persons on the neutral ground as well as on the adjacent property, where injuries proximately result from the municipality’s negligence in permitting a dangerous tree to stand on the right of way of its street.
Now in 65 C. J. S., Negligence, Section 21(b), pages 432-3, it is said: “No one is liable for an injury proximately caused by cm act of God, which is an injury due directly and exclusively to natural causes without human intervention, which could not have been prevented by the exercise of reasonable care and foresight. *■ * '* The application of this rule may preclude any recovery for injuries caused by extreme weather conditions, # * * or extraordinary or unprecedented * * * winds, * * *. An act which may be prevented by the exercise of ordinary care is not an act of God; * * * ” (Emphasis supplied.) See also 38 Am. Jur., Negligence, Section 7, page 649, and Section 75, page 734.
The tree had been dead for nearly two years. Whether the City had actual knowledge of its dangerous condition was controverted and the jury resolved that is
The requested peremptory instruction was properly refused, and the demurrer, which raised the same questions, was likewise properly overruled.
The City complains that the trial court erred in admitting a topographical survey, made by the City engineer, on the ground that he did not start from an established corner. It cites J. R. Buckwalter Lbr. Co. v. Wright,
The trouble about this alleged error is that the City itself, in its cross-examination of the same witness, introduced three photographs which showed Katie Avenue in its entirety, with the graveled portion, the trees, and 'the place where the child was struck, much more clearly than was depicted in the survey to which objection was made. Consequently the error was harmless.
In the original suit David Andrew Hillman, M. D. Hillman and Mrs. Clydie Mae Hillman were individual plaintiffs. However a nonsuit was taken and a new ac
This contention is not maintainable because the administratrix was empowered and had the right to bring the suit. Section 1453, Code 1942; J. J. Newman Lbr. Co. v. Scipp,
By paragraph 13 of the declaration, it was alleged that Mrs. Hillman, her husband, and David Andrew Hill-man, a brother of the deceased, were deprived of the love, companionship, etc., of the deceased. The jury was instructed, at the instance of the plaintiff, that they could consider the loss of love, companionship, etc., if any, of the deceased child, which her survivors would have enjoyed, except for her death. The City contends that this was error because the court refused its proposal to show that Mrs. Clydie Mae Hillman, formerly Mrs. Lambert, married M. D. Hillman on June 19, 1950, the same day that she obtained a divorce from Lambert, and that Brenda was born thereafter on August 20th, and that it was entitled therefore to invoke a presumption that Lambert was the child’s father.
Hillman, on the stand, admitted the date of the marriage and the date of Brenda’s birth, just as the appellant proposed. He and Mrs. Hillman were husband arid wife when the child was born. Of course the conception must have occurred about seven months prior to this marriage. But Hillman testified that he was the father of the child. While the court should have permitted the City to inquire as to the date of Mrs. Hill-
The City also contends that the verdict is excessive.
In Gordon v. Lee,
The verdict here is not so large as to evince passion, prejudice or corruption. McDonald v. Moore,
No prejudicial error appears in the record, and the cause must, therefore,, be affirmed.
Affirmed.
