80 N.Y.S. 780 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The plaintiff has recovered a small judgment for personal injuries sustained by his minor child by reason of the falling of a tombstone upon her in defendant’s cemetery. The plaintiff, with his wife and three children, were visiting the cemetery on the
On the day in question the plaintiff and his family reached the grave by walldng upon what is referred to as a well-defined, beaten pathway, made by use, and extending from Orchard avenue to and beyond the place of the accident. Its width is stated at from 12 to 21 inches. It is merely the sod between the grave mounds, tramped into a pathway. After the plaintiff had planted flowers and weeded and cleared up the grave, picking up bits of paper, etc., to carry and throw away, the party started to retrace their steps. The girl who was injured was the two years and eight months old child, and she was walking just ahead of her mother, the latter carrying the baby; and as the little girl was passing between the graves the tombstone fell upon her, breaking her leg.
It cannot be doubted that the defendant owes some duty of care to those who are lawfully on the premises to see to it that they are reasonably safe, in-so far as ordinary diligence will accomplish that result. The learned counsel for the defendant conceded on the trial that, if any liability existed, it attached to the defendant, but he insisted that express knowledge of the dangerous condition must first be acquired, before the defendant can be held to be under any obligation to act. There is, however, nothing in the situation to remove the case from the operation of the general rules governing constructive notice. The defendant is the absolute owner of the property, and in full possession and control of it; those to whom receipts for lots-have been given having no estate or interest in the land as such, but merely a right to its use for burial purposes, subject to the rules, regulations, and general control of the defendant. People ex rel. Coppers v. Trustees, 21 Hun, 184; Went v. Methodist Protestant Church, 80 Hun, 266, 30 N. Y. Supp. 157; Buffalo City Cemetery v. City of Buffalo, 46 N. Y. 503. Even where a deed had been given to a lot owner, in the case last cited, Judge Folger said (page 505) :
“Tlie effect of such conveyance, under the statute from which the plaintiff derives its powers, is, we suppose (for no copy of any conveyance is laid before us), no more than to confer upon the holder of a lot a right to use for the purpose of interments. No such estate is granted as makes him an owner in such sense as to exclude the general proprietorship of the association. The association remains the owner in general, and holds that relation to the public and to th§ government, while, subject to this, the individual has a right, exclusive of any other person, to bury upon the subdivided plat assigned to him. He holds a position analogous to that of a pew holder in a house for public worship. It is a right exclusive of*782 any other of the congregation, hut subject to the right of the religious corporation which represents the ownership of the property to the public, and is the legal owner of the fee of the property.”
The defendant has apparently always assumed the duty of exercising the care incident to ownership. Its foreman testified that, in the locality in question, his instructions from the defendant were to cut the grass; keep the paths, mounds, and gravestones in good order; to keep the latter straight in line; and to straighten them when, as occasionally happens, they are found leaning, from the effects of storms or. otherwise. There was, however, no regular inspection of the monuments, either when they were originally set up of after-wards, for the purpose of ascertaining whether they were in safe condition, although accidents similar to this one were not uncommon. The foreman testified on direct and on cross examination, on the subject of his instructions, as follows:
“Q. What orders have you about keeping headstones on public lots in order? A. Try to keep them straight in a line — just keep them lined up. Sometimes they might be leaning a little back, if there is a storm. I try to keep them upright and straight — straight in a line. That is all. * * * Q. You say your instructions are to see that these base stones are in line and up in order? A. Yes; we see they may not fall as stones do sometimes. Q. That is, to keep them from falling on people that pass by, and on children? A. Yes.”
The stone which fell in this case had been set more than a dozen years, and apparently improperly. There were holes in the base, and corresponding holes in the headstone, for the purpose of inserting metallic dowels to keep the latter in place, but no dowels had been placed in the holes. The base was beveled from the point of contact with the headstone, and the stone must have gradually shifted so that it was ready to fall at the merest touch at the time of the accident. The evidence given by the plaintiff’s wife was to the effect that the little girl was not playing at the time, and did not touch the stone, unless her attire may have brushed it as she was passing, while the defendant proved that had the stone been set in its proper place upon the base, even without dowels, its weight would have kept it firmly, so that it could only be dislodged by the application of considerable force beyond the power of the child.
The defendant owning the property, and lawfully assuming to supervise and control its care and maintenance, including the keeping of the monuments and tombstones in this portion of the grounds in safe and proper condition, the application to it of the general rule of liability for negligence necessarily follows. Donnelly v. Boston Catholic Cemetery Association, 146 Mass. 163, 15 N. E. 505. The rule is fairly stated by Mr. Justice Willard Bartlett in George v. Cypress Hills Cemetery, 32 App. Div. 281, 282, 52 N. Y. Supp. 1097, as follows:
“Having regard to the control which the law gave to the corporation, and which it actually exerted within the limits of the cemetery, X think its officers and agents were bound to exercise reasonable care not to permit the introduction into the lots, or upon or about the graves, of anything which they knew or ought to have known would constitute an unusual source of danger to persons lawfully visiting such lots or graves.”
It is obvious from what has been said that there is no element of contributory negligence in the proof, and that the defendant’s negligence is fairly established from the condition of the tombstone on the day it fell, and which must have been discoverable upon ordinary inspection, but which inspection was never had, and also from the length of time which had elapsed since the stone was improperly placed in the first instance.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment of the municipal court affirmed, with costs. All concur, except JENKS, J., who dissents.