Argued March 13, 1940.
In this action in trespass brought by plaintiff against the Borough of St. Marys, for personal injuries, The St. Marys Trust Company, as trustee, was brought in on scire facias as an additional defendant. The trial resulted in a verdict for $1,000 for plaintiff against the borough and for the borough over, against the additional defendant. (Baxter v. Homestead Boro.,
Before midnight on December 24, 1936, plaintiff was walking westwardly on the paved sidewalk along the *Page 390 north side of Center Street in the Borough of St. Marys on his way to a nearby church to attend a midnight mass. The walks and streets throughout the borough were in a general slippery condition and as plaintiff passed the east end of the property owned by the additional defendant, walking near the center line of the sidewalk, he slipped on the icy pavement and fell prone to the plot between the sidewalk and the curb. Within 4 inches from the sidewalk, on this plot, there were a series of iron stakes driven into the ground, from one foot to sixteen inches high. The stakes were cut from angle iron with flanges about an inch wide and the top surface was L-shaped with a sharp surface where the two flanges met to form the angle. In slipping, plaintiff lost his balance and fell upon one of these stakes. The force of the fall of his body upon the top of the stake tore the wall of his abdomen causing a traumatic ventral hernia. The stone sidewalk was six feet wide, and between the sidewalk and the curb there was a plot of ground 18 feet wide; both were within the limits of Center Street as laid out by the borough. The plot between the curb and the sidewalk was maintained by the abutting property owners and in the spring of 1936 the land in front of the Trust Companys' property, from the sidewalk to the curb, had been seeded and the stakes placed along the walk to discourage pedestrians from walking on the grass. There was no wire, rope or chain connecting the stakes. The night was dark and the nearest street light was about 200 feet away. Plaintiff was familiar with the neighborhood and had observed the stakes on former occasions but at the time of his injury he gave no thought to them and did not see them.
The Trust Company, the owner of the property, is chargeable with actual knowledge and the Borough with constructive notice of the existence of the stakes.
No liability was created by the slippery condition of *Page 391
the sidewalk because that condition was general throughout the borough. Whitton v. H.A. Gable Co.,
The duties imposed upon the municipality and the property owner have been discussed in the recent case of Schramm et ux. v.Pittsburgh,
From an application of these well established principles, it follows that it was for the jury to say whether the defendants should have foreseen that the stakes, of a kind not ordinarily used for the purpose and set close to the sidewalk, probably would be a source of injury to users of the sidewalk. Under all the circumstances the jury were justified in finding defendants guilty of negligence in that the probable danger of injury outweighed the useful purpose of the stakes. Guinter v.Williamsport,
The question of plaintiff's contributory negligence is to be determined by the peculiar circumstances of the case, (Penna.R.R. Co. v. Kilgore,
Plaintiff testified that though he was aware of the stakes he didn't think anything about them at the time because his thoughts were on the church he was about to attend. To the question: "You didn't see them just before you fell?" he replied: "No sir, I did not." Plaintiff is not necessarily charged with contributory negligence because of his previous knowledge of the location of the stake which caused his injury. In the Musselman case, the plaintiff with a choice of ways, knew of the defect in the sidewalk which caused her injury but did not see it because of the darkness. Whether she exercised reasonable care under the circumstances was held to be a question for the jury. In Mellorv. Bridgeport,
The plaintiff in the instant case was walking near the center line of the pavement about three feet from the stakes. His mind was on the mass he was about to attend. Whether he was exercising due care for his safety, under the circumstances, or whether in the darkness he should have seen the stakes, appreciated their danger and so conducted himself as to avoid injury were questions not free from doubt and were therefore, for the jury.
Judgments affirmed.