53 A.2d 93 | Pa. | 1947
Plaintiffs appeal from the refusal of their motion to take off a compulsory nonsuit. They sue for the death of their child, aged two years and eleven months, drowned in a pond maintained by defendant. They lived in a house on the east side of Fern Street in the Borough of Freeland. Defendant's land is on the west side *12 of the street, Fern Street being the boundary between the borough and Foster Township. The pond, about 75 feet wide and 1000 feet long, has remained on the land from which coal was removed by a stripping operation many years ago. Almost the entire pond is surrounded by a bank of dirt and rock about 35 feet high. At the eastern end of the pond, at a point nearest plaintiffs' house, there is neither bank nor barrier. The distance from that point to plaintiffs' house is 410 feet and it is at that point where the child is said to have drowned. Between the west side of Fern Street and the pond is open ground. A path extends from Cedar Street (a borough street northwest of plaintiffs' house) across defendant's land in a southeastward direction and passes the end of the pond at a distance variously given; one witness stated it to be five feet. That path is less than 400 feet from plaintiffs' house and has been used for many years by school children going to and from the borough to the Foster Township Grade School in the township a short distance south of plaintiffs' house.
Mrs. Mussolino testified that the child had been playing in their front yard with other children from the neighborhood. She does not appear to have known that the child left their premises. There is no evidence by anyone who saw the child go to the pond.
Plaintiffs contend that they have brought their case within section 3391 of the Restatement of the Law of *13
Torts, recently considered in Altenbach v. Lehigh Valley R. R.Co.,
"(6) The said basin on November 9, 1942, was filled with accumulation of surface water with no guard rail or any other protection at its Eastern boundary.
"(7) On the said 9th day of November, A.D. 1942, at about 2:30 o'clock P. M., Russell Mussolino, an infant son of the plaintiffs who at that time was two years eleven months and five days old, fell in the water at the said stripping hole and lost his life by drowning.
"(8) The death of the said Russell Mussolino, infant son of the plaintiffs, was caused through the negligence of the defendant Company in failing to provide a guard rail, fence, embankment or some other protection at the Eastern boundary of the said stripping hole and in failing to maintain the services of a watchman on the premises."
The statement of claim is ambiguous in not averring clearly whether the child was on the premises by defendant's permission, express or implied, or whether death resulted from acts of defendant that might be characterized as wilful or wanton. By proceedings under the Practice Act of May 14, 1915, P. L. 483, as amended, *14
defendant, in advance of trial, might have tested the sufficiency of the statement or might have required the plaintiffs to plead more specifically: Sections 20 and 21;2
compare Cameron v. Fishman,
Some misunderstanding seems to have existed. Apparently, plaintiffs proposed to show that part of defendant's land between Fern Street and the accessible end of the pond had been frequented by playing children for such a long time as to fix defendant with knowledge of that fact and to impose the measure of care stated in section 339 of the Torts Restatement. Defendant objected on the ground that the statute of limitations had run and that to allow the plaintiffs to show that children played on defendant's premises would introduce a new cause of action after the period of limitation. We must reject the contention. The learned court was right in its first ruling that plaintiff might show that the child was on defendant's premises by implied permission. While it is elementary that a plaintiff may not amend to introduce a new cause of action after the period of limitation has expired, the general rule is that he may simplify or make his statement of claim more specific at any time so long as he does not introduce a new agency as the cause of action: compareSlother v. Jaffe,
The statement of claim advised the defendant that the child drowned (1) while lawfully on defendant's premises (2) in consequence of its negligence "in failing to provide a guard rail, fence, embankment or some other protection at the Eastern boundary of the said stripping hole and in failing to maintain the services of a watchman on the premises." The plaintiffs were entitled to an opportunity to prove that the child was on the premises by the implied permission of the defendant. Defendant was required to meet the averment that it had failed to exercise reasonable care in the circumstances. It was a matter of defense that the child had no right to be there if that was the fact. The excluded evidence tended to support plaintiffs' contention of implied permission. Whether it was sufficient to support a finding of the fact cannot now be considered because we cannot know what the witnesses, whose evidence was excluded, will say at the trial.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded.
(a) the place where the condition is maintained is one upon which the possessor knows or should know that such children are likely to trespass, and
(b) the condition is one of which the possessor knows or should know and which he realizes or should realize as involving an unreasonable risk of death or serious bodily harm to such children, and
(c) the children because of their youth do not discover the condition or realize the risk involved in intermeddling in it or in coming within the area made dangerous by it, and
(d) the utility to the possessor of maintaining the condition is slight as compared to the risk to young children involved therein."