Flooding a sidewalk with water in freezing weather and thereby causing it to be coated with glare ice may doubtless constitute negligence, but washing slush and dirt from a sidewalk in thawing weather cannot be deemed an act of negligence under ordinary circumstances. *Page 413
The essential facts are undisputed. This was a much traveled sidewalk. The witnesses on both sides agree that the snow which had fallen upon it the night before was slushy and sloppy on the morning of December 5, and that the janitor after removing a part with a shovel washed the remainder into the gutter with a hose leaving the walk clean and bare. The temperature, according to the government weather record, was slightly above freezing. The morning was misty and a light rain or drizzle began about half an hour before plaintiff left the store and continued for some time thereafter. When he attempted to cross the sidewalk it was coated with ice according to the testimony of his witnesses. He claims that this ice resulted from the act of the janitor in using a hose and water to wash off the slush, and concedes that if it resulted from natural causes defendant would not be liable. The sidewalk slopes from Summit avenue down the hill, and there is no claim that any standing water did or could remain upon it. It was wet from the slushy snow, and removing the snow would leave it wet even if the janitor had used no water. The mist turned into a light rain which would keep the walk wet, and it would naturally coat over with ice if it were cold enough.
It seems obvious that the condition of the walk would have been fully as dangerous if the janitor had not washed it "clean and bare" with a hose. It is not likely that any more water remained upon it than would have remained there from the snow and rain. The water from those sources would cause the condition which existed.
Plaintiff had the burden of proving that the accident resulted from the negligence of the janitor and, as the undisputed evidence shows that it is at least equally probable that it resulted from a different cause, he has failed to bear that burden. A verdict which rests upon evidence which leaves the questions of the causal connection between the alleged negligent act and the happening of the accident a matter of speculation and conjecture cannot be sustained. Dun. Dig. § 7047, and cases cited. The finding that the dangerous condition of the walk resulted from the act of the janitor rests upon conjecture, and the motion of defendant should have been granted.
Order reversed and judgment directed for defendant. *Page 414