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Howard v. City of Waterloo

Supreme Court of Iowa
Nov 13, 1928
206 Iowa 1109 (Iowa 1928)

Summary

In Howard v. City of Waterloo, 206 Iowa 1109, 1114, 221 N.W. 812, 814, plaintiff was walking along a public street when she caught her foot in a protrusion of cement and was thrown to the cement sidewalk; a three-cornered piece stuck up two inches and she caught her toe on this protrusion when she took a step.

Summary of this case from Alber v. City of Dubuque

Opinion

November 13, 1928.

MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS: Torts — Defects in Streets — Negligence 1 — Dangerous Depression in Walk. A jury question on the issue of actionable negligence is presented by evidence tending to show that a city had for some two years allowed a portion of a block of cement on a sidewalk to remain in a sunken condition of from 1 3/4 to 2 1/4 inches below the level of the abutting blocks, and that, on the edge of this sunken condition, but on a level with the abutting blocks, there existed a rough, protruding, and overhanging slab of cement under which the toe of a foot might be caught.

MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS: Torts — Defects in Streets —

Constructive Notice.

MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS: Torts — Defects in Streets — Depression

— Negligence Per Se. per se did not see

Headnote 1: 43 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1158; L.R.A. 1916A, 490; 13 R.C.L. 398.

Municipal Corporations: 43 C.J., § 1785, p. 999, n. 30; § 1825, p. 1049, n. 5; § 1855, p. 1089, n. 33; § 2045, p. 1285, n. 2; § 2054, p. 1300, n. 83. Negligence: 45 C.J., § 52, p. 683, n. 45; § 858, p. 1299, n. 4.

Appeal from Black Hawk District Court. — H.B. BOIES, Judge.

Action for damages, resulting from a fall upon a sidewalk. Trial to the court and a jury. Verdict and judgment thereon for the plaintiff. The defendant appeals. — Affirmed.

Walter P. Jensen, for appellant.

Reed, Tuthill Reed, for appellee.


The defendant complains because of the overruling by the court of its motion for directed verdict, which was made at the close of plaintiff's evidence, and renewed at the close of all the evidence.

Only three propositions are presented for our determination. (1) Was the defect such as that the court could properly allow the jury to find negligence on the part of the defendant city? (2) Did the defendant city have constructive notice of said defect? (3) Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence, as a matter of law?

The defective walk was constructed of cement, and was in front of a garage, near the Strand Theater, on the 1. MUNICIPAL same side of the street. Said walk, in CORPORA- accordance with the manner in which cement walks TIONS: are usually constructed, was divided into torts: sections, or blocks, and was three sections defects in wide. The defect was in the middle section. One streets: of the blocks in said section had cracked, about negligence: two inches from the corner, the crack being dangerous irregular in shape, and leaving a sort of depression triangular piece, in walk. with a rough and jagged edge, the same height as the block of cement between it and the building. The portion of the block immediately contiguous to said triangular piece thus broken off had sunk below the level of the remainder of the walk adjacent thereto. The plaintiff testified from observation, in substance, that the adjacent block and said triangular piece were two inches higher than the portion of block thus depressed. There is testimony for plaintiff, from actual measurements taken, that said distance was from 2 inches to 2 1/4 inches, while the defendant's testimony of like character is that said distance is 1 3/4 inches. From the point of lowest depression, there was a gradual slope to a point between 2 and 3 feet therefrom, where the adjacent blocks of cement again became of equal height.

At the time of the accident, the plaintiff and her sister-in-law were walking side by side, the plaintiff being to the right. The plaintiff's testimony is that, in walking, her right foot struck the point of lowest depression in the sunken block, adjacent to the aforesaid triangular piece broken therefrom. She testified that "I caught my foot in a protrusion of cement, and was thrown to the cement sidewalk; that the three-cornered piece stuck up 2 inches, and it caught my toe as I went to make the step;" that, before she could get loose, it had wrenched her ankle.

"I knew that I caught my foot on something that oughtn't to be there. My foot was sore even on the side, and my little toe was bruised. * * * I knew I caught it in that place. The blocks were rough and broken a little bit, and this one in particular, where I caught my foot. Q. Well, do you mean it was broken off from where it had originally been? A. Yes, it was rough, — not a whole lot, but some. The part that stuck up, the one that stuck up mostly on the north * * * it was rough, and it stuck up so I caught my whole toe."

It thus appears that it is plaintiff's claim that, in stepping into the depression with her right foot, the toe was caught by protruding cement from the triangular piece of the block from which the sunken part of said block had been broken, and that this caused her to stumble and fall.

As to whether or not the facts of this case as to negligence on the part of the city are such as to present a jury question, the defendant relies upon Johnson v. City of Ames, 181 Iowa 65, and Hirst v. City of Missouri Valley, 193 Iowa 1225. We held that the facts in the latter case were strikingly similar to the facts in the former case.

Plaintiff relies upon Welsh v. City of Des Moines (Iowa), 170 N.W. 369 (not officially reported); Geer v. City of Des Moines, 183 Iowa 837; Bailey v. City of LeMars, 189 Iowa 751, in all of which the case of Johnson v. City of Ames is distinguished. In Welsh v. City of Des Moines, supra, we said:

"We cannot hold, however, as a matter of law, that a municipality may never be charged with negligence, in case of injury, by permitting elevations or depressions of 1 1/2 to 2 inches in sidewalks to remain therein indefinitely, after notice, actual or constructive, thereof. The question is one peculiarly for the jury, and whether or not such municipality in a given case has negligently permitted such defect to exist should be determined in the light of all the facts and circumstances surrounding the occurrence. This is in harmony with the prior holdings of this court."

In Geer v. City of Des Moines, supra, we said of Johnson v. City of Ames, supra:

"The cited opinion does not negative the duty of the city to exercise reasonable care in the inspection and oversight of its walks, or its duty to remove an obstruction which is manifestly a danger to pedestrians. Neither can it be construed as holding, as a matter of law, that the existence of an obstruction or stumbling block in a sidewalk is not a defect constituting actionable negligence on the part of the city, simply because it is not more than two or three inches in height."

In Bailey v. City of LeMars, supra, where the elevation in the sidewalk was only one inch, and the testimony disclosed that the edge of the elevated portion of the walk on which the plaintiff caught the heel of her shoe was jagged, we said that the same distinction which existed between Johnson v. City of Ames and Welsh v. City of Des Moines could be made, as applied to the facts in said case. We there said:

"In the instant case, it is not so much a question as to the depth of the hole, but is a question whether the hole was dangerous because of the condition of the jagged, overhanging edge, and the other circumstances."

We think that the instant case is controlled by the cases relied upon by the appellee, and that the same distinction exists between this case and Johnson v. City of Ames, supra, as did in the aforesaid cases. In the instant case, we have a depressed portion of the walk, 1 3/4 inches to 2 1/4 inches lower than the next adjacent block of cement, and the same distance lower than the triangular piece of the broken block, with the rough and jagged edge, which, according to the testimony of the plaintiff, caught her toe, and caused her to stumble and fall. As said in Welsh v. City of Des Moines, supra:

"The defect complained of in the Johnson case was a depression of about 3 inches, into which plaintiff stepped, causing her to fall; but the edges were not abrupt, and plaintiff did not claim to have stubbed her toe, or that there was any other cause of her falling than the depression in the walk."

This case is clearly distinguishable from Johnson v. City of Ames, supra, and is controlled by the cases hereinbefore cited and relied upon by the appellee.

While the city is not bound to maintain perfection in its sidewalks, it is bound to exercise reasonable care to maintain its walks in a reasonably safe condition. It is shown by the record that the defect complained of existed for a period of more than two years prior to the time of plaintiff's injury. It was for the jury to say whether the officers of the defendant city, with the description of the place, as given by the plaintiff, of the protruding cement on the rough and jagged edge of the triangular piece, resting 1 3/4 inches to 2 1/4 inches above the sunken, broken-off portion of the cement block, could reasonably have anticipated an injury to someone who was exercising due care, such as befell the plaintiff. In addition to the foregoing authorities, see Baxter v. City of Cedar Rapids, 103 Iowa 599; Patterson v. City of Council Bluffs, 91 Iowa 732.

Inasmuch as the defect existed for a period of two years prior to the time of plaintiff's injury, it cannot be said that the 2. MUNICIPAL defendant did not have constructive notice CORPORA- thereof. Baxter v. City of Cedar Rapids, supra; TIONS: Hollenbeck v. City of Marshalltown, 62 Iowa 21; torts: Montgomery v. City of Des Moines, 55 Iowa 101. defects in streets: construc- tive notice.

Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence, as a matter of law? On this question, the defendant relies on Lundy v. City of Ames, 202 Iowa 100, and similar cases. The plaintiff had not been over the walk for the last couple of 3. MUNICIPAL years, and therefore knew nothing as to the CORPORA- condition of the same. Thus it is manifest that TIONS: such cases as Lundy v. City of Ames, supra, torts: Cratty v. City of Oskaloosa, 191 Iowa 282, and defects in other similar cases, are not applicable in streets: determining this question. In the instant case, depression: the injury occurred on the 17th day of April, negligence 1926, about 8:30 P.M. While it is shown that per se. there were lights inside of the garage, and also a street light not far from the place of the injury, yet the plaintiff testifies that she did not see the depression in the walk, nor the protruding slab that tripped her; that she was walking with care, and had plenty of time, was walking slowly, just about as she would anywhere else in town, paying attention to her surroundings, and talking with those with whom she was in company. The question of contributory negligence is ordinarily a question for the jury. All that is required to constitute due care is to exercise that caution which an ordinarily careful and prudent person would exercise under the same circumstances. She was not bound, at her peril, to discover the defect. Pedestrians, intent on other matters, and looking out for their general course, with no prior knowledge of the defect, usually act, as they are entitled to, on the presumption that the city has performed its duty in maintaining its walks in a reasonably safe condition.

"It cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the pedestrian is bound to keep his eyes glued to the walk on which he travels, or that he assumes the risk of every defect which close inspection of every footstep may reveal. His duty in the premises is reasonable care and caution, but he has the right to assume that the city has also used reasonable care and caution to see that the walk it has provided for the public use is free from traps and defects which render it dangerous." Geer v. City of Des Moines, supra.

See, also, Baxter v. City of Cedar Rapids, supra; Owen v. City of Fort Dodge, 98 Iowa 281; Rusch v. City of Dubuque, 116 Iowa 402; Barnes v. Town of Marcus, 96 Iowa 675.

Thus it appears that there was no error on the part of the trial court in overruling defendant's motion for a directed verdict, and the judgment of the trial court is hereby affirmed. — Affirmed.

STEVENS, C.J., and De GRAFF, ALBERT, and MORLING, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Howard v. City of Waterloo

Supreme Court of Iowa
Nov 13, 1928
206 Iowa 1109 (Iowa 1928)

In Howard v. City of Waterloo, 206 Iowa 1109, 1114, 221 N.W. 812, 814, plaintiff was walking along a public street when she caught her foot in a protrusion of cement and was thrown to the cement sidewalk; a three-cornered piece stuck up two inches and she caught her toe on this protrusion when she took a step.

Summary of this case from Alber v. City of Dubuque

In Howard v. City of Waterloo, 206 Iowa 1109-1115, 221 N.W. 812, 813, a small triangular corner of one of the sections in a cement sidewalk was completely severed from the remaining portion by a break or crack, permitting a contiguous piece to sink below the level of the adjacent walk to a depth estimated at one and three-quarters inches to two and one-quarter inches.

Summary of this case from Beach v. City of Des Moines
Case details for

Howard v. City of Waterloo

Case Details

Full title:MRS.E.E. HOWARD, Appellee, v. CITY OF WATERLOO, Appellant

Court:Supreme Court of Iowa

Date published: Nov 13, 1928

Citations

206 Iowa 1109 (Iowa 1928)
221 N.W. 812

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