190 S.W.2d 866 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1945
Affirming.
Mrs. Louise Reibel fell on the sidewalk in front of a Woolworth store, located on the Bardstown Road, in Louisville, on April 24, 1943, and sustained painful injuries. A block of the concrete sidewalk at the entrance next to the property line had settled an inch or so below the level of the pavement, and it appears that Mrs. Reibel caught her shoe or was otherwise caused to fall because of the defect. She filed a suit for damages against the City of Louisville, the owner of the abutting property, his rental agent, his tenant, the contractor who had remodeled the building in 1941, the subcontractor who had put in the sidewalk, and the Louisville Water Company. She pleaded as to all of the defendants that they had the duty of maintaining the sidewalk in a safe condition, had actual or constructive knowledge of *78 the defect in it, and were negligent in permitting the defect to remain unguarded.
Special and general demurrers of the City were sustained because there had been no notice given of the accident and claim as required by Kentucky Revised Statutes
The court sustained demurrers of the owner, John M. Schmitt, the general contractor, Joseph C. Dahlem, and the Louisville Water Company, and dismissed the petition, as amended, as to each of them upon the plaintiff declining to plead further.
In addition to the general charges of negligence against F. W. Woolworth Company, the tenant, it was specifically pleaded in an amended petition that the defective sidewalk adjoined a vestibule of the store building and that the company owed the duty to its invitees and customers, of whom the plaintiff was one at the time she fell after leaving the store, to provide a safe entrance and had failed to do so. The demurrers were sustained to the petition and two amendments, but the third amendment stated that the defective paving extended "onto the tile portion of the vestibule or entrance of said store, and that the sunken portion of the sidewalk actually extended twelve or more inches into the tile walkway, forming the entrance in front of the door of the store." The company then traversed and pleaded contributory negligence.
The Loop Realty Company, rental agent, withdrew its demurrer and traversed the allegations of the petition and pleaded contributory negligence.
The subcontractors, Koch Brothers, were charged with being also negligent in constructing the sidewalk and thereby contributing to bringing about plaintiff's *79 damage. Their demurrer being overruled, they traversed and pleaded contributory negligence.
A trial was had against the Woolworth Company, the Loop Realty Company, Dahlem, and Koch Brothers. At the conclusion of the plaintiff's evidence a peremptory instruction was given the jury to return a verdict for the defendants. The plaintiff has appealed the case against all of the defendants originally named, except Dahlem, the owner.
Other than to prove the plaintiff's fall and injury, the evidence showed the defect or sinking of the block of paving had probably been caused by a leak in the water pipe of the Louisville Water Company which had softened the earth and caused the block to settle. No part of the sidewalk extended within the vestibule or any portion of the store building. The City may have been liable for damages resulting from the defect in the pavement, but, as we have said, it was properly let out because of the absence of notice of the accident and claim. The owner or occupant of the abutting property has no common law duty to keep the sidewalk in repair unless he created the defective or dangerous condition by some affirmative act. Equitable Life Assurance Society v. McClellan,
The rulings of the court were proper and the judgment is affirmed.