Plaintiff sought recovery from defendant for personal injuries claimed to have been sustained by reason of a fall on an icy sidewalk adjacent to defendant’s property in Hampton, Iowa. Tbe defendant filed a motion to strike certain portions of an amended petition to wbicb reference will be later made and also a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s petition. Tbe trial court sustained tbe motion to strike and also tbe motion to dismiss. Plaintiff filed a written election not to plead further and to stand on tbe record as made. This constitutes a. final adjudication. Rule 86, R. C. P.; Wright v. Copeland,
In an amendment to plaintiff’s petition tbe pertinent allegations which were stricken are as follows:
“(a) Tbe Defendant Company was negligent in that it maintained and allowed to exist tbe fence described * * *, wbicb *16 fence caused, the snow to pile up on the sidewalk * * *, all of which Defendant Company well knew.
“(b) The Defendant Company was negligent in that on December 25, 1954, or prior thereto, it failed to remove the snow and ice that had been piled on the said sidewalk where plaintiff fell, as hereinabove set out.”
The defendant, by filing its motion to dismiss, admitted the allegations of the plaintiff’s amended petition which were well pleaded. Gates v. City of Bloomfield,
We do not deem it necessary to detail other facts concerning the plaintiff and the extent of her claimed injuries. The question presented on this appeal is a legal one. We must determine whether the stricken allegations can be the basis of a claim of negligence on the part of the defendant. We must also determine whether the amendment to the petition alleges any grounds of actionable negligence and whether plaintiff’s petition was properly dismissed.
I. The plaintiff in her brief submitted to this court con- . cedes it is the general rule in Iowa an abutting property owner is under no duty to remove snow and ice from the sidewalk adjacent to the property. Atkinson v. Sheriff Motor Co.,
There is no allegation the fence was negligently constructed. Nor is there any allegation the snow was caused to accumulate on the sidewalk other than by natural causes. It is not alleged the fence was constructed for the purpose of casting snow on the walk. Except where it is shown the accumulation of snow on a public walk and the subsequent ice thereon was the result of some artificial act on the part of the abutting owner, there is no liability on such owner. Dahlin v. Walsh,
In Sewall v. Fox, 98 N. J. L. 819, 821,
And in Bamberg v. Bryan’s Wet Wash Laundry, Inc.,
It has, however, been held a person may not use his property carelessly to the injury of others and that where an owner of abutting property maintains it in such a manner ice forms on the adjacent walk as the result of artificial rather than natural causes, liability for injuries to a person falling thereon may result. Bentson v. Berde’s Food Center, supra.
The pleaded facts are not similar to those set forth in the case of Klepper v. Seymour House Corp.,
II. A property owner does not have charge of, or control over, a public sidewalk and consequently the owner of adjacent property owes no duty to a.pedestrian to clear or make safe for walking, ice and snow which had naturally accumulated on the sidewalk in front of it, unless a statute validly imposes that duty. Radinsky v. Ellis, U. S. App. D. C.,
The situation in the present case is not similar to Hynes v. Brewer, 194 Mass, 435, 439,
In the case before us for review the pleaded facts do not disclose the snow came from the property of the defendant or that if it did it was by reason of any negligent act of the defendant. There is no pleaded fact that the claimed icy and rough condition on the sidewalk was the result of actionable negligence by the defendant. Freeman v. City of Minneapolis,
We hold the trial court properly sustained the motion to strike portions of plaintiff’s petition and the motion to dismiss.— Affirmed.
