167 Pa. Super. 509 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1950
Opinion by
Plaintiff slipped on a step of an outside stairway on defendant’s building and was severely injured in her fall to the landing below. There was an accumulation of snow-covered ice on the step which caused the fall. In this action for damages the jury found in her favor and judgment was entered on the verdict. We are unable to find merit in the contention that the evidence does not convict the defendant of negligence or that plaintiff failed to present a case free from contributory negligence. The judgment will be affirmed.
In the light of the verdict these facts must be taken as admitted: In mid-afternoon of February 22, 1948, a cold clear day, plaintiff in the company of friends went to pay a social call on the steward and his wife who were in charge of the Knights of Columbus Home in Easton and who occupied living quarters on the premises. The home or club house is an extensive building on the north east corner of Ninth and Lehigh Streets in Easton. The premises abut both streets. The main entrance to the club rooms is at the front of the building and is about on the level of Lehigh Street. There is
Defendant owed the same duty to persons lawfully using the stairways leading to its building, as it did to pedestrians on the sidewalk below. There is no absolute duty on the part of an owner to keep his premises and sidewalks free from snow and ice at all times; his only duty is to remove the accumulation within a reasonable time after notice of the dangerous condition. Whitton v. H. A. Gable Co., 331 Pa. 429, 200 A. 644. Accordingly, “To permit a finding of actionable negligence on the part of the owner or occupant of the abutting property the plaintiff must not only sustain the burden of proving an accumulation of sufficient size to constitute an unreasonable obstruction to travel, with actual or constructive notice to the owner or occupant, but must go further and show that the dangerous accumulation was the cause of the fall: Davis v. Potter, 340 Pa. 485, 487, 17 A. 2d 338; Zieg v. Pittsburgh, 348 Pa. 155, 157, 34 A. 2d 511; Hulings v. Pittsburgh, 150 Pa. Superior Ct. 338, 340, 28 A. 2d 359”: Miller v. City Ice and Fuel Co. et al., 363 Pa. 182, 69 A. 2d 140. The burden has been met in this case. The sidewalks generally and the stairway, except for the upper two steps, were practically free from ice and snow. The accumulation of ice and snow on the step which caused the fall was described by plaintiff and her
Favorable inferences from the testimony, to which plaintiff is entitled, also absolve her of the charge that she was negligent in failing to exercise due care for her safety.
There undoubtedly was the means of avoiding the use of the outside stairway by going from the steward’s living quarters through the club rooms and out the front door of the building on to Lehigh Street. But plaintiff did not know of it and there is no evidence that she would have been permitted in the club rooms even for that purpose. There is no proof of a safe alternative means of exit from the building, available to this plaintiff.
In the Ward case, supra, we denied recovery. There is a controlling difference however, in the conduct of the plaintiff in that case and that of the present plaintiff. This plaintiff, to minimize the hazard of the icy step, made use of the handrail in her effort to descend the. stairway: in safety.-The plaintiff in the Ward case,
Plaintiff’s testimony, accepted by the jury, does not convict her of contributory negligence.
Judgment affirmed.