50 A.2d 716 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1946
Argued October 3, 1946. This action of trespass was brought to recover damages for personal injury alleged to be caused by defendant's negligence. The court below imposed a compulsory nonsuit and refused to take it off, and the wife-plaintiff appealed. The careful opinion of Judge WINNET, writing for the court below, shows that the nonsuit was properly entered. The wife-plaintiff testified that she was descending the defendant's dimly lighted stairs leading to the subway, and she stepped upon a piece of paper which seemed to have under it a soft, mushy substance which caused her to fall. The paper covered about one-half, horizontally, of the tread of the step. The testimony showed that the stairway was generally *199 dirty and had been, for a considerable number of days, littered with pieces of dirty, torn newspapers.
The legal cause of the accident, i.e., the substantial factor of the plaintiff's harm,1 was the alleged soft substance underneath the paper on which she stepped. The newspaper did not cause her to fall, it caused the alleged danger to be hidden, and it could not be considered as the substantial factor of her harm.
In what may be termed the obscuration cases, i.e. where the dangerous condition is hidden by some substance such as water, snow, paper or confusing lights, the obscuration is never the legal cause of the harm, but operates in certain cases to relieve the injured party from the contributory negligence of failing to observe the danger. See Leson et vir v. Pittsburgh,
The whole matter is carefully covered by Judge HIRT in Smith etux. v. American Stores Company,
Applying this rule it follows that the soft substance, and indeed the newspaper, might have been dropped or placed on the step a minute before the accident; and there being no actual or constructive notice to the defendant of the presence of the dangerous condition, the soft substance, the nonsuit was properly imposed.
The order and judgment of the court below are affirmed.