64 N.Y.S. 636 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff, while walking through Ludlow street in the city of New York, .between ten and eleven o’clock in the morning, on the:
It is quite evident from all this testimony that the condition of this sidewalk upon which the plaintiff fell was that the flagstone Was cracked, and a small piece of stone had either been removed or had been forced down in the earth, so that there ivas a depression from two to three inches deep, and it was against the side of this depression that the plaintiff stubbed her toe which caused her to fall. The accident happened between ten and eleven o’clock in the morning, on a bright day. The serious .question is whether or not this sidewalk ivas in such a condition that it could be said to be unsafe or dangerous. There seems to be no satisfactory testimony as to the size of the hole. The plaintiff said that her foot was turned in the hole; but afterwards she testified that she stubbed her toe against a protruding stone; and when she was asked whether she stubbed her toe and fell before or after her foot went down into the hole she said: “ Before, if. my foot Avouldn’t have gone into the' hole I wouldn’t have fallen.” One of the other Avitnesses testified
There is no doubt as to the duty imposed upon a municipal corp> oration in -regard to its streets. From the very nature of the case it' is impossible that the public streets should be kept in an absolutely level condition. . Slight irregularities, of necessity, exist, and where a sidewalk is flagged, the mere fact that one of the flagstones was slightly above the adjoining stone would not create a dangerous condition of the street. Mo one could reasonably-anticipate any danger from the existence of such an irregularity; and if a jwudent 2>erson could not have anticipated that an injury would hap2Den from such a condition of the sidewalk, the defendant, as a municipal corporation," was not negligent in not guarding against an accident that a i^rndent and careful 2erson would not have anticijrated. The case of Beltz v. City of Yonkers (148 N. Y. 67) seems to me to be in point and decisive of this appeal. In that case the plaintiff was walking upon a sidewalk of stone "flagging, eight feet in. width, constructed' of two courses of flags four feet' wide. At the pioirit in this walk where the accident occurred, and at' the joint where two of the flags were united, the edges of the" stone' were broken off and -the broken parts removed. ' This left an uncovered depression in the center of the walk of the same depth as the thickness of
. The judgment and order appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs. ' -
Van Brunt, P. J., and Hatch, J., concurred; Patterson and Rumsey, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
The complaint in this action was dismissed at the close of the plaintiff’s proofs. The plaintiff was injured by a fall on the sidewalk in front of No. 16 Ludlow street, in the city of New York. She' showed that her foot caught in a hole in the sidewalk, and i; was claimed that the city was liable by reason of its negligence in allowing the sidewalk to remain in an unsafe and dangerous condition. It was shown that the defect had existed for six months. It was also shown that a flagstone in the sidewalk was split in fragments and that the plaintiff’s foot, as she was walking along, went into what she at one time states to have been a hole about a foot deep, and at another two or three inches deep, but other witnesses' say that it was from two to three inches in depth. One of the wiL nesses states that the stone was broken into pieces of twelve and six inches and the hole was between. The fracture of the flagstone was such that at One edge it was depressed, and the depression was large enough for a person’s foot to be caught therein. The plaintiff testifies that her foot was so caught, and that she fell prone and sustained injuries. She stubbed her foot against one of the projecting edges and it went into the hole. The complaint was dismissed on the ground .that the case of Beltz v. City of Yonkers (148 N. Y. 67) controlled.
The much-discussed Beliz case seems to.be generally regarded as
There the question was regarded as one of law by the court, because .of the exceedingly slight character of the depression and the fact that, from all that appeared, the street had been tised in safety while in that condition by pedestrians for six years. The decision was merely .the application of a conceded rule of law to the particular facts of that case. It cannot be said that the facts in this case are identical with those in the Beltz case. Assuming that the depression caused by the fracture of the stone here was only three inches in depth, still we have the testimony that this depression was in length so great that a person’s entire foot would sink into it and be caught so 'as to precipitate a fall. It cannot be assumed, as a matter of law, that this aperture or gap in the street was so insignificant that all reasonable men would agree that it was not dangerous. To say the least, reasonable and prudent men might differ as to whether an accident such as happened to this plaintiff could or
We think that the facts of the two cases are quité different and that the complaint should not have been dismissed only upon, the authority of the Belts case.
As that is the only matter involved on this appeal, we think the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event. ■
Rumsey, J., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.