148 N.E. 304 | Ill. | 1925
The Appellate Court for the First District having granted a certificate of importance, this writ of error is brought to review its judgment affirming a judgment of the superior court in favor of August Mindeman, administrator of the estate of Roy Mindeman, deceased, in his action against the Sanitary District of Chicago, arising out of the accidental drowning of Roy Mindeman, a child five years and ten months old, in the canal of defendant.
The Sanitary District of Chicago is a municipal corporation organized under the laws of this State. In order to take care of the sewage of that part of the city of Chicago *530 south of Eighty-seventh street and to provide a navigable waterway from the Calumet river to the main channel in the Sag, defendant had excavated and constructed a canal sixty feet wide and twenty-five feet deep from the main channel eastward to the western limits of the city of Blue Island. On each side of the channel, extending five or six feet above the water, is a perpendicular concrete wall with a flat top four feet wide. On both sides of the canal the banks rise with a gradual incline from the top of the concrete wall ten or twelve feet to the level of the surrounding territory. Beyond the top of this incline is the spoil bank. From the photographs in the record it appears that there is a strip of level ground several feet in width between the foot of the spoil bank and the top of the canal bank. The right of way of the sanitary district is several hundred feet wide at the point in question and is used principally for agricultural purposes. The nearest public highway to the point in question is the junction of John street, which runs parallel with the right of way, and Ogden avenue, which runs south from the right of way to Broadway. It is 300 feet from this corner to the canal bank. For the convenience of the contractor constructing the canal a roadway was opened across the right of way north from the termination of Ogden avenue. No work had been done at this particular point for about two years and the unfinished banks had caved in, so that there was an incline from the private roadway down to the water's edge. In the excavation beyond the end of the finished canal walls there is a pool of water in which considerable rubbish was floating. In the open field around the unfinished end of this canal the children of the neighborhood play. There are no houses on the west side of Ogden avenue between the right of way of the canal and Broadway, which is two blocks south. East of Ogden avenue, on John street, there are several houses facing north, and there are houses on both sides of Broadway. Roy Mindeman lived with his parents and three brothers on Broadway *531 way at Vine avenue, one block east of Ogden avenue. After lunch on the day of the accident he went to the home of a playmate, Irving Rothenberger, a boy eleven years old, who lived about a half-block west of him. After playing at the house a while they got some bottles from the alley south of Broadway and took them to the spoil bank on the south side of the canal. Irving had played around the unfinished end of the canal before but Roy had never been there. After playing with the bottles on the spoil bank they went down to the canal wall, threw the bottles in the canal and began throwing rocks at them. Irving walked up the bank to get some more rocks, and as he turned around he saw Roy disappear over the edge of the wall. He ran down to the canal and saw him struggling in the water about fifteen or twenty feet west of the finished end of the wall. Irving called for help and ran home to tell his mother. Roy's father, who was working a few blocks away, was notified and he ran to the canal. When he arrived there he saw Roy's hat floating on the water about twenty-five feet west of the finished end but did not see Roy. The next day the canal was dragged and the body was recovered from the channel.
The water in the canal is not visible from the public street and it cannot be reached without crossing 300 feet of private property of the sanitary district. It is the contention of plaintiff that defendant permitted children to go upon its property over an open roadway and to play in and about the pool at the unfinished end of the canal, and that this pool, with boards and bottles floating upon it, was attractive to children, and that defendant is liable for the death of the boy in question under the doctrine established in City of Pekin v.McMahon,
In dealing with a case in which the facts were almost identical with those of the case at bar, the Supreme Court of Kansas in Somerfield v. Land and Power Co.
In Barnhart v. Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Co.
Without extending this opinion further by quoting from the many authorities on the subject, it is sufficient to say that the courts seem to be of one mind in holding that a canal, a pond, or other open body of water on private property, is not of itself an attractive nuisance, as that term is used in describing an instrumentality which will render the owner liable for injuries to a child attracted to and injured by it. (United Zinc and Chemical Co. v. Britt,
In McDermott v. Burke,
The judgments of the Appellate Court and superior court are reversed.
Judgment reversed.