Concurrence Opinion
concurring. It is obvious that much of the litigation and apparent confusion concerning a municipality’s liability for defects in a sidewalk stems from an apparent inconsistency between the decisions of this court in Kimball v. City of Cincinnati,
In the O’Brien case, this court unanimously followed the unanimous decision in the Kimball case holding, in effect, that, to impose liability on a municipality for a defect in a sidewalk, that defect must be a substantial and not a slight one. The defect alleged in the O’Brien case, consisting not only of a difference in elevation but also of a variation in the width of a crack and a considerable variation in its depth, was markedly more “substantial” than the “difference in the elevations of the slabs of one or two inches” claimed in the Griffin case. Yet, in the O’Brien case, this court unanimously chose to follow its ruling in the Kimball case, thus rejecting, in part at least, its divided decision in the Griffin case.
Therefore, to the extent that the decision in the Griffin case is inconsistent with the decision in the O’Brien case and with, the decision agreed upon herein, we no longer consider the Griffin case as controlling.
Lead Opinion
The defect complained of was not of such a substantial nature as to impose liability on the defendant municipality. The facts of this case bring it squarely within the rule laid down in Kimball v. City of Cincinnati,
Judgment affirmed.
