Jules J. DARTEZ, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
The CITY OF SULPHUR, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*483 C. A. Miller, Jr., Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellant.
Charles C. Broussard, Sulphur, for defendant-appellee.
Before TATE, SAVOY, and HOOD, JJ.
TATE, Judge.
This is a suit by a pedestrian against a municipality. He sues to recover for personal injuries sustained when he fell as a result of a defective sidewalk condition. After trial on the merits, the plaintiff's suit was dismissed. He appeals.
Recovery is sought on the basis of a sidewalk defect creating a hazard to the traveling public, namely a bent parkingmeter post. The defendant city is alleged to have breached its duty to maintain its sidewalks in reasonably safe condition for pedestrian use. Lee v. City of Baton Rouge,
The trial court dismissed the suit on the ground that, although the city was negligent in failing to remove this hazard to pedestrian traffic, nevertheless the plaintiff's own negligence contributed to his fall. But we need not discuss the respective contentions of the parties as to whether or not the plaintiff was contributorily negligent, for we have concluded that the negligence of the city had no legal causal relationship to the accident which resulted in the plaintiff's injuries.
The facts are as follows:
The plaintiff Dartez was walking on a municipal sidewalk during daylight hours. He tripped upon a piece of baling wire left on the sidewalk by a person unknown. He stumbled and fell across a bent parkingmeter post, sustaining rather serious injuries to his private parts as a result of his fall straddling it.
The parking-meter post was bent at a 45-degree angle towards and over the center of the sidewalk. It thus protruded into the walkway area normally used by pedestrians. (It had been struck by motor vehicles.) The top of the post was from 25-42 inches high as bent angling to the sidewalk's center. The city had actual or constructive notice of the bent condition of this meter post, which had existed for at least a few weeks.
Dartez passed the bent post several times a day to and from his home. Knowing that it was a hazard to passage, he simply went around it every time he passed. The evidence *484 is clear that he would not have fallen onto the post had he not stumbled upon the nearby piece of wire.
We agree with the trial court that the city was negligent in permitting the bent post to protrude at knee or waist level across the pedestrian lane of travel.
Negligence is conduct which creates an undue risk of foreseeable harm to others. Brown v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
Nevertheless, for the negligence of a defendant to be a "legal" or "proximate" cause of injuries sustained by another, (1) the defendant's negligence must be a causein-fact of the injured person's injuries, and (2) the risk and harm encountered by the injured person must fall within the scope of protection afforded by the duty to others breached by the defendant's negligence. Dixie Drive It Yourself New Orleans Co., v. American Beverage Co.,
The bent parking-meter post was undoubtedly a cause-in-fact of the plaintiff's injuries, because it was a substantial factor in producing them. Dixie Drive It Yourself, cited above.
However, as will be discussed below, the risk and harm encountered by the plaintiff was not one which the duty breached by the defendant's negligence was intended to prevent: Thus the risk of injury encountered by the plaintiff was not within the scope of protection afforded by the duty so breached, and therefore the defendant's negligence was not a legal cause of the plaintiff's injuries.
In relation to this conclusion, the leading case of Dixie Drive It Yourself quoted at
To the same effect, Prosser on Torts (3d ed., 1964) suggests, Section 49, pp. 282-283: "It is quite possible, and often helpful, to state every question which arises in connection with `proximate cause' in the form of a single question: was the defendant under a duty to protect the plaintiff against the event which did in fact occur?"
*485 In the present case, the duty breached by the city was to maintain its sidewalks free of hazards to pedestrians in the nature of traps or hazards which they might not reasonably anticipate or observe, having regard to the right of a pedestrian to assume that public ways provided for his passage do not contain unexpected dangers or unforeseeable obstacles. See White v. City of Alexandria and Sherrill v. United States F. & G. Co., cited above. The purpose of the duty thus is to prevent injuries to pedestrians who might fall over this knee-high obstacle in their path if unable reasonably to observe or appreciate the hazard so created.
Here, the plaintiff Dartez's accident did not result from his failure to appreciate the hazard to his passage created by this obstacle. He was perfectly aware of it and intended to skirt it.
Dartez's fall resulted, not from the negligently maintained post, but rather from the negligence of a third person in leaving obscure baling wire in his path, Merchant v. Montgomery Ward & Co., La. App. 1 Cir.,
That is, the plaintiff's injuries resulted because when he fell the bent post happened to be in his way. The duty imposed upon the city not to obstruct the walkway by the bent pole did not include within its scope the protection of those who might need the space occupied by the bent pole in order to fall free of it and thus to hit the sidewalk instead, nor to guard against resulting harms so highly extraordinary as to be unforeseeable within reason. Spiers v. Consolidated Companies,
The city's failure to remove the bent pole as a sidewalk hazard was thus not a legal (i. e., proximate) cause of the plaintiff's injuries when he fell upon it, any more than it would be of injuries sustained by someone who fell from the second floor of a nearby building and happened to strike the bent meter post in falling.
In so holding, we distinguish the present situation from those where negligence foreseeably creating a risk of accident is held to be the proximate cause of all consequences, however unforeseeable, which a foreseeable accident caused by such negligence is a substantial factor in producing. Bergeron v. Houston-American Insurance Co., La.App. 1 Cir.,
For the reasons assigned, the judgment dismissing the plaintiff's suit is dismissed at his cost.
Affirmed.
