(After stating the foregoing facts.) The special ground of the motion for new trial, assigning error on the direction of the verdict, will be considered in connection with the general grounds. It is well settled that the direction of a
*315
verdict is error if the evidence, together with all reasonable inferences and deductions therefrom, would have authorized a verdict for the opposite party.
Miraglia
v.
Gose,
17
Ga. App.
639 (1) (
A municipality must exercise ordinary care and diligence to keep its streets and sidewalks in a reasonably safe condition for the use of pedestrians, and whether that has been done is usually a jury question.
Seymour
v.
City of Elberton,
67
Ga. App.
426 (
There is in this record sufficient evidence to make a jury question as to whether the agents of the city had placed these signs in this place, and also sufficient evidence to make a jury question as to whether the act, if imputable to the city, constituted negligence on its part. The trial court directed the verdict, however, on the theory that the negligence of the plaintiff, in not observing and avoiding the signs, was such as to bar her recovery as a matter of law. It is true that it has been held to be negligence which would as a matter of law preclude recovery for a person with normal eyesight to walk into a place of obvious danger and fail to see it, although it was in plain view and in a place where anybody in the exercise of ordinary care would have seen it.
Hill
v.
Davison-Paxon Co.,
80
Ga. App.
*317
840 (
The trial court erred in directing a verdict in favor of the defendant.
Judgment reversed.
