128 Tenn. 250 | Tenn. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the Conrt.
This action was brong'ht by Cain, ag’ainst the plaintiff in error to recover damages for an injury alleged .to have been inflicted npon him by the negligence of the city in permitting the existence of certain obstructions on the sidewalk of Bluff street. He recovered a judgment for $200, and from this an appeal was prosecuted to the court of civil appeals, and there the judgment was reversed. The case was then brought to this court by the writ of certiorari.
There was a motion made in the trial court for a peremptory instruction in favor of the plaintiff in error, defendant in that court. Error is assigned here
The facts disclosed by the record are as follows:
Bluff street is a short and narrow residence street near the boundary line of the city. At the place where the accident occurred there was. a cinder way doing service for a sidewalk, about three and one-half feet wide. At the outer edge of this cinder path, where the curbing would have been if the street had been paved with bricks or cement, and nearly opposite the gate of one Clift, there were two sticks or stobs driven in the ground for the purpose of preventing wagons from encroaching upon the cinder way. One of these stobs was two feet- and two inches high, and the other about three feet and two inches. They were three to-five inches in circumference at the top, and had been placed in the margin of the sidewalk, according to-Cain’s witnesses, with the consent of John W. Flenni-ken, chairman of the board of public works, who, as such chairman, had charge of the streets and street forces of the city. This is denied by Mr. Flenniken; but, in passing on this motion, we must assume the evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses as true.
The injury occurred at night, just after dark, in July, 1910. The stobs had been placed, two or three weeks before this time. Cain testifies that he passed along the sidewalk in question every day, and was familiar with the location of the objects mentioned. It is shown that on the night of the injury he had been
Do these facts present a case for peremptory instructions in favor of the city, because of the contributory negligence of Cain?
The cases bearing on the subject of momentary forgetfulness of a danger are very numerous. As appli
It is impossible to formulate a rule which will embrace all of these cases. We have one case on the subject, Knoxville v. Cox, 103 Tenn., 372, 53 S. W., 736, in which the court quoted from Beach on Contributory Negligence, as cited by counsel, the following:
“Where one, knowing the danger, temporarily forgets it and in consequence suffers, his forgetfulness will not avail him as an excuse. What he knows he must remember at his peril, and not to remember is contributory negligence, if it occasions the injury,” and then commented: “If this is to be understood as announcing the proposition that prior knowledge of a defect, with momentary forgetfulness of its existence, resulting in an injury, constitute contributory negligence which will bar recovery, then we are not prepared to'.accept it. These facts while they are to be
It is to be remembered, in considering the facts now before the court, that three and one-half feet width of way permitted no extra space for two men to walk together, and that Cain, who was on the outside, was necessarily thrown very near the stobs in passing them. It was too dark to see the stobs, and the two men were walking rapidly. Under the circumstances there was-evident danger of tripping on the stobs. There can be no doubt that, if Cain had kept the place, the situation,, and the stobs in mind, he would not have been injured as little doubt that his failure to keep these things in mind was the proximate cause of that injury. He knew the danger, but did not keep it in mind. Was his forgetfulness an excuse1? We agree that a citizen walking along a street does not.have to keep his eyes on the pavement all the time; that he may presume the city has done its duty; that even when he knows it has. not done its duty, and there is a defect of which he has knowledge, he does not have to keep the defect in mind at all times on peril of suffering injury without redress; that if his attention is called away by any cause adequate to effect that result, considering human nature in its ordinary aspects, and with regard to its ordinary susceptibilities, he may be excused, and that a jury must judge of the adequacy and reasonableness of such cause as related to the duty of ordinary care
We are of the opinion, therefore, that defendant in error was, on his own showing, inexcusably negligent, and that the trial judge should have given the peremptory instruction called for.
But it is urged that the question of contributory negligence is one always for the jury. This subject was considered in Railway v. Haynes, 112 Tenn., 712, 730-734, 81 S. W., 374. It was there held that the negligence of a plaintiff is as much a matter for the examination of the court as that of a defendant, with a view to determining whether there was negligence in law, but that whether such negligence, conceding its existence, was the proximate cause of the injury, or proximately contributed to it, was always a question for the jury. “The question of contributory negligence, in the aspect above indicated,” continued the court, “is always a matter for the jury. Subsequently, however, on appeal, in considering the verdict of the jury under an assignment that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict, or upon reviewing the action of
It results there is no error in the judgment of the court of civil appeals, and it must be affirmed.