7 S.W.2d 514 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1928
Affirming.
South Fifth street in the city of Louisville runs north and south, and Beecher street, in the southern part of the city, runs east and west, and a doubled street railway track is laid on Fifth street. The territory at the junction of the two streets was within the corporate limits of the municipality of Oakdale until March 16, 1922, when it was by appropriate proceedings annexed to and became a part of the city of Louisville. Beecher street was opened before the annexation; but, whether it had been accepted by Oakdale and maintained or repaired by it, the record is not clear. At about 8 p. m. on *42 May 12, 1926, appellee and plaintiff below, A.N. Flanders, sustained personal injuries by falling into a hole about 31/2 feet deep, located on the space occupied by the junction of the two streets and near the northeastern corner of the west half thereof, and about 2 feet or 18 inches from the end of the ties of the west street railway track thereon. He had been visiting relatives who resided on the south side of Beecher street, about midway the square west of Fifth street, and he was endeavoring to board a street car back into the city where he resided, and was crossing the above-described portion of the intersection in order to get to the north side of Beecher street, when he fell into the hole and sustained the injuries to recover damages for which he later filed this action. The answer denied the material averments of the petition and pleaded contributory negligence. Appropriate pleadings made the issues, and upon trial there was a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $2,200, and, defendant's motion for a new trial having been overruled, it prosecutes this appeal from the judgment rendered thereon.
Although relied on in the motion and grounds for a new trial, there is no complaint in argument of counsel in this court that the verdict was excessive, but it is strenuously contended that the court erred in overruling defendant's motion for a peremptory instruction, because (1) Beecher street had never been accepted by defendant so as to impose maintenance duty upon it under the facts proven in the case; (2) if mistaken in that contention, then the defect complained of was one growing out of the plan of original construction and for which, under a line of cited cases, the city wound not be liable; and (3), that defendant was guilty of such contributory negligence as to deprive him of the right of recovery. Some other minor contentions are made, but they are so clearly immaterial that we have concluded to neither mention nor discuss them, one of which is a complaint leveled at the leading instruction, but which is bottomed upon some one or more of contentions 1, 2, and 3, supra.
1. Disposing of ground 1, it appears that concrete sidewalks were erected and in use at the time of the accident on both the southern and northern sides of Beecher street, but whether they were ordered to be constructed by either Oakdale before the annexation or by the city of Louisville after it, or whether they were constructed exclusively by the property owners, on their own volition, is not made to appear in the record. The *43
general doctrine is that, where a public street or a public road is taken into a city by annexing the territory of its location, there is thereafter imposed a duty on the part of the annexing city to properly maintain it in a reasonably safe condition for public travel. City of Ashland v. Cummings,
That being true, it then became the duty of defendant, under all opinions and text-writers, to bestow such care and attention in the way of maintaining the street in a reasonably safe condition as the surrounding conditions and circumstances required, and it is manifest that it cannot be successfully contended that it did so in this case when it suffered to exist in the open space of the intersection, not only a ditch over a part of both streets, but likewise a deep hole therein, and into which plaintiff fell and sustained his injuries. Whatever relaxation the law might indulge with reference to the duty of a municipality concerning the maintenance of, or reasonably safe repairing of its suburban public ways, it certainly would not extend to the point of excusing it for a failure to repair such defects as the open ditch and the hole complained of in this case. We therefore conclude that ground 1 is not sustainable.
2. Ground 2 is equally without merit. Counsel cite in support of it the cases of Clay City v. Abner, 82 S.W. 276, 26 Ky. Law Rep. 602, Carroll's Adm'r v. City of Louisville,
3. In endeavoring to maintain ground 3, counsel contend that plaintiff was not injured at any place in the street that he had a right to be, which necessarily overlooks the rule that a pedestrian on a street has the right to use any portion of it, and is not confined to any usual or customary space or route especially prepared for his purpose. City of Glasgow v. Gillenwaters,
With the law as we have above outlined, the court under the facts of this case gave the usual and ordinary instructions, and a painstaking consideration of the record reveals no error authorizing us to disturb the judgment, and it is accordingly affirmed.