119 Ky. 228 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion of the court by
Reversing.
The appellant on the 4th of October, 1902, filed his petition against the appellee in the Kenton circuit court, and in substance alleged that in the nighttime on the 21st of February, 1902, when walking along the sidewalk on the east side of Russell street, in the city of Covington, and while crossing an alley, he fell, injuring his hip a'nd back, causing the .muscles and ligaments of his limbs to become strained and bruised, in consequence of which he had become a permanent cripple. He alleged that his injuries were the result of the negligence of the appellee in permitting this.sidewalk or flagging to become sunken and tipped, and the stones between to become sunken, so as to form a deep hole; that he was using ordinary care to avoid injury at and prior to the time he fell; that the unsafe condition of the street or sidewalk, at the place he received his injury, was known to appellee ■ a sufficient length of time before the accident to have repaired and.made the place reasonably safe; and.that he, appellant, did not know of its unsafe and dangerous condition. The appellee controverted the petition and pleadded contributory negligence on the part of appellant. This plea was controverted by appellant. A jury was impaneled and heard the evidence of appellant and two witnesses for appellee, when the court on motion of appellee by a peremptory instruction directed the jury to find for the appellee, and the case is here on appeal. The only questions to be ■determined on this appeal are whether or not there was any ■evidence introduced cn the trial tending to establish appel
It appears in the record that it was agreed that Russell street is one of the prominent streets of the city, and much traveled; that appellant, on the evening stated in the petition, was going from his home to church, and just as he reached about the center of the alleyway mentioned in the petition his foot slipped on the uneven surface of the rocks, and he fell and was severely and permanently injured. Some of the witnessesi described the place at which appellant fell in substance as follows: That there were holes: and ruts about the center of the alley. The slabs over the center thereof had widened by long usage and time to about fifteen inches apart and six or seven inches in depth. These stone slabs were worn and tilted, and made it more dangerous to pedestrians on account of the sudden decline from where the sidewalk terminated at the north side of the alley to the center thereof. These slabs had been worn slick and oval in shape, with a space between the ends thereof in the center of the alley of several inches and six or eight inches in depth. That this condition of the sidewalk had existed for several years, gradually becoming worse. The facts in the case before us are almost identical with the facts in the case of Carlisle v. Secrest, 75 S. W., 268, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 336. In that case the court said: “It was the duty of the appellant to keep its sidewalk reasonably free from defects endangering the traveling public while using it, and if it failed in the performance of this duty it is responsible for the damage caused by such failure. The question as to whether or not there was such failure upon the part of the municipality, or as to whether or not the appellee was guilty of contributory negligence in the premises, were peculiarly within the province of the jury to determine; and,
In the case of Fugate v. City of Somerset, 97 Ky., 53, 16 R., 807, 29 S. W., 971, this court said: “These issues presented by the pleadings, as to whether said street was so obstructed as to render same dangerous and unsafe for public travel, and whether plaintiff was injured by reason of same, and as to whether plaintiff was himself guilty of such negligence as to prevent his recovery, were all questions of fact for the determination of the'jury under appropriate instructions by the court. Under the usual rule that, admitting evex’y fact given in evidence to be true, and every inference deductible therefrom, if plaintiff has xnade out his case, it is error to take the case from a jury by a peremptory instruction.” We are of the opinion that there was some evidence introduced tending to support appellant’s cause of action, and the court erred in giving a peremptory instruction.
On the trial the appellant introduced several witnesses, by whom he proved the condition of the sidewalk as stated, ■ and then offered to prove by thexxx that for fifteen or eighteen months, next prior to appellant’s injuries they had frequently seen pedestrians fall upon this sidewalk at the place where appellant felt Some of them were injured slightly, and some of them were not injured. On the trial of the case of District of Columbia v. C. H. Arms, 107 U. S., 524, 2 Sup. Ct., 844, 27 L. Ed., 618, the plaintiff in the lower court was permitted to show that prior to the accident to him a large number of persons were injured at the same place on the sidewalk. The court in that case, Justice Field wxfiting the opinion, used this language in reference to the competency of this evidence: “On the trial a member of the metropolitan police, who saw the deceased fall on the sidewalk and went to
Wherefore -the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceeding^ consistent herewith.