31 Pa. Super. 476 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1906
Opinion by
There is no serious contention between the parties as to the material facts in this case. The owner of a large building on Fourth avenue, a busy street in the city of Pittsburg, had turned it over, to a contractor for the purpose of having extensive repairs made. At the time of the accident the contractor had the full possession and control of the building and may be considered, for the purposes of this case, as standing in the shoes of the owner, exercising the same fights and subject to the same obligations, as to the use of the building, that would ordinarily attach to' the owner. The ground under the sidewalk in front of the building had been excavated, as is customary in cities, for a coal vault, into which material could he delivered from the street through an opening in the sidewalk commonly known as a coal hole. The contractor ordered a load of sand from the appellee and shortly thereafter a loaded wagon, in charge of one of the sand company’s drivers, reached the building. He was told by a representative of the contractor that the sand was to be delivered through the coal hole into the vault beneath and that the covering would-be removed
The first assignment of error challenges the right of the plaintiff to recover on the broad ground that the evidence fails to disclose any act of negligenee on the part of the defendant, or, in other words, that under the law and the facts it owed to the plaintiff no duty in regard to the open coal hole, in a breach of which may be found the proximate cause of his in-julT-
Generally speaking the law imposes on a municipality the duty of keeping the streets and sidewalks thereof in a safe condition for the use of the traveling public, and clearly enough, within well-known and established conditions, it must answer for any injury resulting from a breach of that duty. The owner of a building in a populous city is permitted, ex necessitate, to excavate the ground under the sidewalk and make an opening in the latter to enable him to utilize the space so obtained and thus qualify, to a degree, the general right of the public to the exclusive use of the sidewalk for passage. It would not strips even a layman as singular that the law\ should impose on such owner, as a compensation for his privilege, the duty of reasonably safeguarding his opening so as to fairly protect the public in its ordinary use of the street,
No good purpose would be subserved by reviewing in detail the cases cited in the briefs of counsel. They all deal.with the duties that either the municipality or the property owner owed to the injured person or to each other. In no one of them has it been held or inf,¡mated that a person suffering an injury, under conditions -like those that now present themselves, could recover therefor from one who occupied no such relatieir’towards him as the municipality or the property owner, who wras in no way charged with the duty of keeping the streets and sidewalks free from dangerous obstructions, who had not himself placed or caused to be placed in the way of the traveler any such obstruction, and who was, at the time of the injury, engaged in the transaction of his lawful and usual business.
* A coal hole constructed like the one under consideration is not an unlawful and criminal nuisance per se. The right to construct and use it is a concession made by the public to the property owner, growing out of the necessities of modern urban life. True, the public exacts a consideration for the grant and this consideration the property owner, by accepting it, agrees to pay. The municipality, which is the guardian and rep re
It is the function of the law to secure to the traveler a reasonably safe passage over the public streets and this it aims to do by holding the municipality and the property owner to a strict performance of their well-defined duties in this regard.. But it is not its object to uselessly interfere with or destroy any of those adjuncts to the performance of the usual avocations of men, brought into existence by the common necessities of the ever-increasing populations of our cities and towns.
We think, therefore, the first assignment of error must be sustained, and as that necessarily results in the destruction of tlie plaintiff’s case there is no occasion to consider the remaining assignments.
Judgment reversed.