Plaintiff sued and obtained judgment against the District of Columbia for damages on account of injuries resulting from a fall on a public sidewalk. She was caused to fall by tripping or stumbling upon the edge of a paving block which projected higher than the adjacent block. From the evidence it appeared that the difference in elevation, which had existed for more than a year, was not due to faulty construction, but was caused by a uniform settlement of the paving blocks immediately south of the point where plaintiff tripped. The only real issue of fact was the extent to which the northerly block was elevated above the southerly block. On this point the testimony varied from 1!jÍ6ths of an inch to 3 inches. The jury was instructed to return, in addition to its general verdict, a special finding as to the height of the elevation. The jury found the elevation to be “between 1 and 1% inches.” Following the verdict and special finding, the District moved for judgment non obstante veredicto. The motion was denied and this appeal followed.
The ground for the motion non obstante veredicto, and the sole ground urged here, is expressed by the District in the following proposition:
“A defect in the public sidewalk which consists only of a change in elevation between paving blocks of not more than 1 and % inches is an inconsequential defect for which the District of Columbia can not, as a matter of law, be held answerable.”
This proposition, ably presented in the District’s brief, is basically founded on the rule well established here, and elsewhere, that a municipal corporation is not an insurer of the safety of travelers upon its streets and is only required to maintain sidewalks and roadways in a reasonably safe condition. Campbell v. District of Columbia,
The theory of non-liability of a municipality for so-called inconsequential defects in public streets and walks has reached its highest development in the courts of New York. Beginning in 1895 with Beltz v. City of Yonkers,
The doctrine developed to the extent that the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in Ray v. City of New York,
Whether the “rather arbitrary rule of depth” is 5 inches, as stated by the Second Circuit; or 4 inches, as indicated in Carson v. City of New York,
The New York rule has been criticized in its own jurisdiction (see dissent of Judge Vann in Hamilton v. City of Buffalo, supra), and there are apparent exceptions to the rule. Cf. Moroney v. City of New York,
Furthermore, in 1943, the highest court of New York, in Wilson v. Jaybro Realty & Development Co., Inc.,
“There is no rule that a hole in a public thoroughfare must under all circumstances be of a particular depth before its existence can give rise to a legal liability.”
The language just quoted has resulted in differing conclusions in the lower courts. See opinion of Justice Johnson in Hayes v. City of New York, Sup.,
Whatever may be the exact rule in New York, we find it neither sound nor clear. If it fixes an arbitrary figure, without regard to surrounding circumstances, it is not sound. If it permits surrounding circumstances to create exceptions, it is not clear; for the circumstances of each case will,, necessarily differ.
We have examined the decisions in other jurisdictions which have adopted rules pat-temed after that of New York. The cases are too numerous to discuss, but it appears to- us that they have met with the same difficulties found in the New York cases. For example, see Richmond v. Rose,
While the question does not appear ever to have been squarely a presented in this jurisdiction,' we think our local decisions indicate that the question of the District’s negligence in the present case was properly submitted to the jury. Although holding time after time that the District is not an insurer of the safety of travelers, our courts have held that defects in streets or sidewalks, even though slight, present a jury question. In District of Columbia v. Boswell,
We conclude that the proper rule is stated in McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, 2d Ed. Revised, Vol. 7, Sec. 3088, as follows:
“ ‘In the very nature of the situation it must be obvious that the courts ought not and cannot arbitrarily determine that the maintenance of a particular defect in a street or sidewalk does or does not constitute negligence.’ For example, the question whether a hole in a street or sidewalk is an actionable defect is a question of fact for the jury. And the same rule applies to cracks in sidewalks.”
The present case presented a situation wherein reasonable men could differ on the question of the District’s negligence, and the issue was therefore properly submitted to the jury.
Affirmed.
