127 N.Y.S. 498 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1910
During the construction of certain buildings on Franklin avenue, Brooklyn, an iron pipe about an inch and a half in diameter lay across tbe sidewalk with the end thereof turned upward about a foot or so from the curb. Later a new sidewalk of cement or concrete was laid upon this pipe and around the end of it nearest the curb so as to leave the end of the pipe projecting upward above the new sidewalk about two and a half inches. This condition continued for more than a year and until the plaintiff, a pedestrian, in passing by stumbled against tbe pipe and was thrown down and injured. The plaintiff recovered a verdict which the defendant now moves to set aside upon the ground that, as a matter of law, the projecting pipe presents too slight a defect upon which negligence may he predicated.
This is not the case of a defective sidewalk made so by wear and tear but is an instance of direct interference with the right of passage. And while the defect in dimension was
In Moroney v. City of N. Y., 117 App. Div. 843, the flagging projected above that which adjoined it about two inches, hut under the raised flagging was a space into which the plaintiff, a woman, caught her foot. It was held that whether or not this defect was such as to occasion reasonable apprehension that an accident might occur was a question of fact. The case was affirmed by the Court of Appeals without opinion. 190 N. Y. 560.
In Wood v. Third Ave. R. R. Co., 91 Hun, 276; affd., 157 N. Y. 696, a circular opening two inches in diameter in a manhole cover, placed there to aid in lifting the cover, caused the plaintiff, who was walking on crutches, to be injured by his crutch catching in the hole. The opening was held to constitute negligence upon the ground that it was an unnecessary and dangerous interference.with the street even though the manhole itself was lawfully there.
The case of Archer v. City of Mt. Vernon, 57 App. Div. 32, is quite like that at bar. There an inch and a quarter water pipe which originally lay flush with the ground in an unpaved space between the curb and flagging was permitted to project above the ground four inches as the result of a change of grade. The plaintiff while passing stumbled over it. The jury’s verdict in his favor was upheld.
The difference between the case last cited and the one at bar only makes in favor of the latter. In the case cited the obstruction was outside of the flagged portion of the sidewalk, and being there described as a water pipe it may be regarded as useful and necessary. Here the smooth flagging extended all the way to the curb and nothing in the surroundings would he apt to indicate to the wayfarer the presence of the projecting pipe, nor was any reason whatever assigned for its existence.
Motion to set aside verdict denied.
Motion denied.