170 Ky. 292 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
While walking along St. Clair street on August 12th, 1913, plaintiff, Richard Gatewood, was injured by the fall of a wooden shed and brought this action against the Board of Councilmen of the City of Frankfort to recover damages. On the first trial there was a hung jury. On the second trial there was a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $2,125.00. A new trial was awarded, and on the third trial there was a peremptory instruction in favor of the defendant. Plaintiff appeals and asks that the verdict of $2,125.00 be substituted for the verdict rendered in favor of the city on the last trial.
The record discloses the following facts: Before daybreak on August 12th, 1913, a fire broke out in the old Yeoman Building. About six o’clock the fire was practically out and the fire department returned to its head
For the city it is insisted that the new trial was properly awarded, and the. peremptory instruction properly given on the next trial because it was no part of the city’s duty to look after the safety of the shed over the street. Without entering into a lengthy dis
Another point is that plaintiff’s injuries were caused ‘by an act of the city performed in the exercise of a governmental function, and that, therefore, the city is not liable. If plaintiff had been injured by the fall of the wall itself there might be some ground for the above contention. As a matter of fact, however, plaintiff was not injured by the city while in the exercise of a governmental function, but sometime after the city had ceased to act in a governmental capacity. Plaintiff’s right of action is predicated not on the fact that the defective condition of the shed was brought about by the act of the city, but on the failure of the city to use ordinary care to maintain its sidewalk in a reasonably safe condition. Such negligence furnishes exception to the general rule and the governmental function-doctrine has no application. Schwalk’s Adm’r. v. City of Louisville, 135 Ky. 576, 122 S. W. 860; Snider v. City of St. Paul, 51 Minn. 466, 53 N. W. 763, 18 L. R. A. 151.
Lastly it is insisted that the evidence for the city shows that its officers did not know of the defective condition of the shed, and that the time which elapsed between, the time it became defective and the hour when the injury occurred was entirely too short to charge the city with constructive notice of the. dangerous condition of the shed. True we have ruled that a city ,is not charged with knowledge .of the defective condition of the street where the defect has existed for only three or .four hdurs. Hazelrigg v. City of Frankfort, 29 R. 207,
However, we conclude that the new trial was properly awarded because of error in instruction No. 1. That instruction imposed upon the city the duty of giving reasonable and timely warning of the dangerous condition of the shed and sidewalk, if' same was dangerous, “by barriers or other such means as might have been reasonably sufficient to warn pedestrians of the unsafe condition of said shed or sidewalk,” etc.
It wil'1 be observed that this instruction required the city to.use barriers or other such means as might have been reasonably sufficient, etc. We have held that the test of the sufficiency of the warning in a case like this does not depend on whether or not barriers or similar means are employed, but on whether or not the means actually employed, whatever they may be, are reasonably sufficient for the purpose. Hence, an instruction which limits the city to use of certain methods of precaution is misleading and erroneous. In such a case the city is required to use only such means as are reasonably sufficient to warn pedestrians of the dangerous condition of the. shed and sidewalk, and the jury should have been so instructed. City of Louisville v. Lenehan, 149 Ky.
Though the new trial was properly awarded, it follows from the foregoing that the trial court erred on the second trial in peremptorily instructing the jury to find for the defendant.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.