288 N.W. 196 | Wis. | 1939
Action by Jean Marie Grinde, by guardian ad litem, against the city of Watertown to recover for injuries sustained in a park maintained by the city.
The plaintiff was injured on a dismantled "slide" which had been laid aside awaiting repairs. Trial was had to a jury, who found the slide violated the "safe-place" statute, sec. 101.06, Stats., and was a "nuisance." Judgment was entered on the verdict for the damages assessed. The defendant moved for a directed verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which motions were denied. The defendant appeals from the judgment. A detailed statement of the facts is made in the opinion. The plaintiff was injured by catching her hands in a part of a slide placed in a city park for the entertainment of children. When in operation steps led to the top of the slide. The slide portion was of metal and curved from the top down to a short distance from the ground and had wooden guards about four inches high on each side. Sections of the wooden guards were fastened together with bolts. These bolts had become loose and likely to catch the hands of children using the slide. The superintendent of the *553 park had been informed of this condition, and had directed that the slide portion be removed from the framework supporting the top of the slide and the steps and be repaired. The slide was accordingly removed on the morning of the day of the injury and laid on the ground bottom side up near some bushes about six feet from where it had been. The steps were placed under the bandstand in the park. About 4 o'clock in the afternoon the plaintiff, a child of nine years, attempted to use the slide and caught her fingers in a loosened joint of the railing and so injured her hands that one finger on one hand and two upon the other were amputated at the first joint. The child claimed that the slide portion was right side up when she tried to use it, but said it was near the bushes. The plaintiff said she climbed on the slide from the bottom part on the ground to the top using the railing to aid in climbing. A carpenter had been employed to fix the slide and had promised to fix it that day or the next. When the slide portion was bottom side up it could not be used for sliding as there were cleats on the bottom a foot apart to support the sheet of metal. It was in that condition when an employee of the park board who did not return to the park in the afternoon left at noon. The slide portion had been moved about three feet prior to the accident by some person unknown after it was left bottom side up.
The case was submitted to the jury on two theories: (1) That "at or immediately prior" to the injury to the plaintiff the safe-place statute was applicable to it, and (2) that the slide was a nuisance.
(1) The claim that the safe-place statute applies is based upon the ruling of this court in Bent v. Jonet,
We are of the view that a slide in a public park maintained by a municipality is not a public building within the meaning of sec. 101.06, Stats. The situation is more like that of the flagpole in a schoolyard involved in Lawver v. Joint District,post, p. 608,
(2) That a city is liable for maintenance of a nuisance when operating in its governmental capacity is recognized by the decisions of this court. The rule to that effect is stated in Harper v. Milwaukee,
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint. *556