110 Kan. 95 | Kan. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Eva Conley, a woman of about fifty years, while walking on a street in. Kansas City in the nighttime, stumbled over several pieces of iron water pipe and received serious injuries. The street was being repaved by the Kramer Construction Company under a contract with the city. An action for damages against the city and the construction company resulted in a judgment in plaintiff’s favor, from which defendants appeal.
The accident occurred on August 6, 1915, about nine o’clock in the evening. The petition alleges that defendants carelessly placed upon the part of the street “ordinarily used for travel by pedestrians” the water pipes in question and other materials “and negligently allowed the same to remain in and upon said portion” of the street; that it was the duty of the construction company in the prosecution of the work of repair to keep the portion of the street “ordinarily traveled by pedestrians in a safe condition” for travel,
The answer was a general denial with pleas of contributory negligence.
Wyandotte street runs in an easterly and westerly direction'. It was being repaved between Twenty-first and Twenty-second streets. The construction company had placed barricades across Wyandotte at Twenty-first street and Twenty-second street and kept a watchman there at night. Plaintiff testified that she was returning to her home and reached Wyandotte street going east.
“It was dark. When I started to walk from Twenty-second street down Wyandotte a man rose up and said, ‘Oh, Lady! don’t go out on that street, stay on the sidewalk until you get further down by the alley — the crossing, then you can«go out’; that is all he said. I stepped right back on the sidewalk and walked on toward my home. When I got down to the crossing — it was an alley, I call it an alley; it was a parkway, some of them call it a crossing. . . . When I got down to this point, I started to go out in the street and I fell on something. ... I was just stepping out there; I was going to walk down the middle of the street. Well, I always had a habit, my mother always told me to walk in the middle of the street after night, I was afraid of alleys. ... I fell into the street. . . . The first thing I knew a man asked me if I was hurt. There were no lights about there. It was perfectly dark. As near as I can tell I fell over an iron pipe. ... I could tell it was iron pipe by the sound of it when I . . . went back over it. . . . The first thing I knew this man took me and says, 'Are you hurt?’ ”
She inquired who he was. He said, “It is Mr. Buck, the grocery-man down here.” On cross-examination, she. testified that when she got to Twenty-second street and Wyandotte, she didn’t see any barricades across the street, but she did not look for any. She did not see any lights there. She was just turning off of Twenty-second street when the watchman spoke to her. “He just rose up and spoke to me — ”
“Q. What did he say to you? A. He says, 'Lady don’t go out in the street, stay on the sidewalk.’
“Q. What else did he say? A. Not another word; if he did, I failed to hear it.”
Mr. Buck was a witness for the plaintiff and testified that he saw Mrs>. Conley when she fell. “I was on my front porch. The place where she fell was directly in front of my porch.” He saw her coming down the street, walking moderately fast. “As she got to
'Much space is devoted in the b,riefs of both parties to a discussion of whether plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. In our opinion, the important question is whether any negligence op the part of the city or the contractor was established. The negligence charged in the petition is that defendants permitted portions of the street ordinarily used for travel to be obstructed by certain water pipes without warning the traveling public of the presence of the obstruction by placing lights or other signals thereon or by warning the plaintiff of the presence of such obstruction. After referring to the fact that plaintiff, who testified several times, was not able to tell definitely where she fell except that it was near the alley, counsel say in their brief:
“But we have the uneontradicted testimony of Mr. Buck, who picked her up, and the admitted testimony of Mr. Matoon, defendants’ own witness, as to exactly where she fell. Their own Mr. Matoon says she fell at a point about twenty feet before she ever arrived at the alley.”
Again counsel say that when she got within about twenty feet of the alley she then started to go out in the street itself as instructed by the watchman and stubbed her toe on an iron pipe or pipes that were lying in the parking.
It has been held that an instruction which limits the city to the use of certain methods of precaution is misleading and erroneous for the reason that the city is required to use only such means as are reasonably sufficient to warn pedestrians of the dangerous condition of the street. (Gatewood v. City of Frankfort, 170 Ky. 292.) The test is whether the means employed are reasonably sufficient for the purpose intended. Under particular facts the sufficiency is often a question for the jury. (6 McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, § 2804.)
While it has been said that “cases are rare in which the court can say as a matter of law that due care has, or has not, been exercised” upon the part of a city in, keeping its streets in a reasonably safe condition for public travel (Holitza v. Kansas City, 68 Kan. 157, 159, 160, 74 Pac. 594), we have no hesitation in the present case in declaring as a matter of law that the plaintiff’s testimony established the fact that the defendants used due care by warning the
There have already been three trials of the case. In each of the first two the jurors were unable to agree upon a verdict. There is no ground for dispute over the controlling facts. Plaintiff has told her story and it is apparent that the litigation should end.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to render judgment for defendants.