184 Ky. 342 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
This action by Mrs. Scbmidt against the city of Newport and the Frankel Amusement Company, incorporated, was commenced in the Campbell circuit court on June 6, 1917, to recover damages for personal injury sustained by her in a fall on the sidewalk in front of the Hippodrome theatre, in the city of Newport, on the evening of March 16. Both general and special demurrers were filed by the defendants and the general demurrer sustained and the special demurrrer overruled to the original petition. Thereafter an amended petition was filed by Mrs. Schmidt, but without demurrer or other plea she filed a second amended petition in lieu of both of the former pleadings and to this last a general demurrer was filed by each of the defendants and sustained, and plaintiff declining to plead further the action was dismissed, and she prosecutes this appeal.
The original petition was very inaptly drawn and did not state a cause of action. The amended petition was a great improvement upon the original petition and the second amended petition was very much better in form and substance than the two preceding. It was in the nature of a substituted petition, and appellant Schmidt
"While a city is not an insurer of the safety of persons traveling upon its streets, it is under the duty of exercising ordinary care to keep and maintain its streets and pavements in a reasonably safe condition for use by the public once it has undertaken so to do. Liability does not arise until the city, through its authorized officers, receives or has reasonable opportunity to obtain knowledge of the defective condition of the street or pavement, but the municipality will be charged with notice of all defects of which it could, by the exercise of reasonable care, have learned. And if it authorize a property owner, sucb as the Frankel Amusement Company, to use the pavement along the street for purposes of its own and in so using and occupying the pavement, reasonable care is not exorcised for the safety of the traveling public, and injury results directly and proximately therefrom, the city as well as the property owner is liable in damages. As said in the case of the Hippodrome Amusement Company v. Carius, 175 Ky. 783, if the property owner is allowed an extraordinary use of the sidewalk for Ms private convenience, or for the benefit of his property, and such use constitutes a servitude' of the sidewalk for his private benefit, or use, and injury arises from the de
. The rule appears to be well established in this jurisdiction that a municipality is not responsible for injury to one falling upon a- pavement unless the pavement was inherently dangerous or was constructed and maintained according to a plan which was not reasonably safe, and which reasonably prudent persons would not have adopted or maintained. And as said in the City of Lebanon v. Graves, 178 Ky. 755, “it makes little if any substantial difference, so far as the liability of the city is concerned;.whether the unsafe and dangerous condition of the street was due to the defective plan, or due to conditions that the city permitted to come up after the construction of the street pursuant to the plan that contemplated the street reasonably safe for public travel; and that when a city undertakes to construct or reconstruct a street or pavement, it is under a duty to so construct and maintain it as that it will be reasonably safe for public travel; and this duty is a continuing one, and no plan will justify the construction of a pavement so slick and slippery as to be unsafe and dangerous.”
After setting forth the slippery and dangerous condition in that case, the opinion proceeds: “We think there was ample room for reasonable difference of opinion as to whether this pavement was reasonably safe for public travel. Indeed, the decided weight of the evidence shows that it was palpably unsafe and dangerous for public travel. Whenever a particular place in a pavement is laid in such condition and so remains for about three years as that travelers walking on it are seen to slip or fall almost every day, and others, who are familiar with its danger, avoid it altogether by going out in the street, it is manifest that such pavement is unsafe and dangerous. We have, therefore, no difficulty in ruling that the trial court properly submitted the case to the jury.”
Prom the allegations of the petition, the pavement at the point where Mrs. Schmidt fell was constructed and maintained in a “slippery, smooth, glazed and glossy” condition, which rendered “the walk unfit and unreasonably unsafe and dangerous for public travel by pedes
It would appear that the original construction was upon such heavy grade and of such a smooth and slippery and slick surface as rendered the pavement inherently dangerous to pedestrians. The mere fact that a pavement is constructed of smooth tile is not sufficient in itself to render it so dangerous and unsafe as to fix liability upon a municipality for injury to persons falling thereon, nor to even raise a presumption that such walk is inherently dangerous. Indeed, we are inclined to the opinion that a tile pavement is as safe as a'concrete pavement, and in addition is quite 'as durable and much more beautiful. But if it is glazed and so highly polished as to be slick and slippery it may become inherently dangerous and render the city liable in damages for injuries received by persons who fall thereon, but this liability rests upon the inherent slippery nature of the walk and not upon the material, color or advertisement written or printed thereon. Nor do we regard the word “Hippodrome” in the advertisement as such a burden or servitude as was calculated to impose liability upon the theatre company in the absence of other contributing facts and circumstances. But the tiling in the pavement was itself intended as an advertisement and was calculated to attract attention and render the theatre conspicuous and thus become an asset and benefit to its business. In this way the pavement was used for the special benefit of the theatre and its business, and this use was an extra burden and servitude upon the pavement. If the pavement was maintained in such unsafe condition as to render the city liable for the injury sustained by Mrs. Schmidt, then the Amusement Company was also liable, and the two were not improperly joined in the action.
Judgment reversed with directions to overrule the general demurrer to the second amended petition, and for other proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. ■
Judgment reversed.