104 A. 113 | Md. | 1918
This is a suit to recover damages for injuries sustained by the appellant (plaintiff) by reason of the alleged negligence on the part of the defendant (appellee) in permitting a sidewalk in Chestertown to be out of repair and in an unsafe condition. The Court rejected four prayers offered by the plaintiff and granted the defendant's first prayer, which instructed the jury that "there is no evidence in this case legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover and their verdict must be for the defendant." This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a verdict rendered in accordance with that instruction, and the only exception taken was to the granting of that prayer, and to the rejection of the plaintiff's prayers.
The plaintiff was eighty-one years of age at the time of the accident. About 7:30 o'clock on the evening of December 13, 1916, he was going from his home in Chestertown to the post office, and stepped in a hole in the sidewalk on Queen street, which caused him to fall, resulting in the injuries complained of. The pavement had been dug up for the purpose of laying a pipe to a property abutting on the sidewalk, and the earth had been put back in the place excavated, but the bricks had not been relaid, and the ground had apparently sunk. The plaintiff claimed that it had been in the condition *687 complained of for several weeks — the witnesses differing as to the precise time, but most of them saying three or four weeks. In bad weather it became muddy and someone had placed a few bricks in it for pedestrians to step on. The excavation was made through the entire width of the sidewalk, was from two and a half to three feet wide and was several inches deep near the bricks, getting somewhat deeper towards the center. Several witnesses testified that it was a dangerous place. A bricklayer, who was employed by the contractor to replace the bricks after the pipe had been laid and the hole filled, gave as his reason for not having done so that the winter weather had interfered. He said that he measured the space the following spring and the depth at the deepest point was about two inches, but he did not see it during the winter, and there was evidence that it had been filled up after the accident to the plaintiff. It had snowed some the day of the accident and it was a stormy, dark night. The electric lights on that street were not burning, and there was no light except such as came from the houses. The plaintiff testified that: "This opening was covered with snow. It was soft and mushy. I trod on it, and when I found myself I was thrown on my face on the pavement partly unconscious." In another place he said that he supposed his foot slipped and he fell. He laid on the pavement sometime and, to use his language, "I scrambled up and steadied myself and walked to the doctor."
We will first consider the defendant's prayer. It does not in terms instruct the jury that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover by reason of his contributory negligence, but that is what was relied on at the argument. It could not have been granted on the ground that there was no legally sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant, for the defect was such that, if the defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known of it in time to have remedied it before the accident, the municipality was liable, Keen v.Havre de Grace,
It was suggested, rather than argued, that he should have taken a lantern, as the street lights were out, so he could see whether the way was safe, but the evidence shows that Queen street, with one exception, was the most frequented street in the town, and it could hardly be contended that it could be held as a matter of law to have been contributory negligence not to have taken a lantern at half-past seven o'clock in the evening to go over those two squares and part of another to the post office of a town of the size of Chestertown. The case of Commissioners ofAllegany County v. Broadwaters,
Nor could it be said that because there was another route he should have taken that and, not having done so, can not recover. In Calvert County v. Gibson,
As to the knowledge of the plaintiff of the defect in the highway, the case of County Commissioners of Prince George'sCounty v. Burgess,
The question is not whether the Court, if it was sitting as a jury, would find the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence, but whether it can properly say that the evidence so conclusively shows such negligence that under the law he was not entitled to recover. It is not always easy to draw the line between such cases, but we are of the opinion that this case as presented by the Record should have been submitted to the jury, and hence the Court erred in granting the defendant's prayer. In addition to the authorities we have cited, the testimony of the plaintiff quoted above as to why he adopted the route he did was for the consideration of the jury. Such a defect in a sidewalk on a street used as this is might reasonably be presumed to be repaired in a week or ten days, for even if the brick could not be relaid, on account of the weather, a few cinders could be used, as was done after the accident.
Of course, when the Court granted the prayer of the defendant, it followed that those of the plaintiff would be rejected. As the case will be remanded for a new trial, it is proper to briefly refer to them. His first and second prayers were defective in not submitting to the jury the question of notice, actual or constructive, to the defendant. Keen v. Havre de Grace, supra;Baltimore City v. Walker,
In view of our conclusion as to the defendant's prayer, we see no objection to the theory of the third prayer of the plaintiff, although the form of it might be changed to prevent misleading the jury. It is not necessary for the defendant to offer evidence of contributory negligence, for if the plaintiff's evidence discloses it the defendant can rely on it before the jury, and, of course, can do so in order to take the case from the jury when the evidence justifies that action. The plaintiff's fourth prayer is practically the same as the one approved in Annapolis v.Stallings, supra, and would doubtless have been granted if the case had been submitted to the jury. It follows from what we have said that the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded, the appellee to paythe costs. *693