Altemus v. Talmadge

58 F.2d 874, 61 App. D.C. 148, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4777
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1932
DocketNo. 5292
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 874 (Altemus v. Talmadge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altemus v. Talmadge, 58 F.2d 874, 61 App. D.C. 148, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4777 (D.C. Cir. 1932).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff in an action for personal injury. (Since the entry of judgment, plaintiff died, and her executor was substituted, but we shall speak of her throughout as appellee.) In her declaration, appellee claimed damages against appellants jointly for injuries sustained on September 21, 1927, as the result of a defective sidewalk jointly maintained on the west side of Fourteenth street in the city of Washington. Appellee, a woman sixty years of age, about 9 o’clock in the evening, was walking south on the west side of Fourteenth street. When she reached 'a point in front of premises No. 2910 Fourteenth Street Northwest, she stopped to observe a chronometer in the bay window of a store. Thereafter she turned to continue her course southward on Fourteenth street, when, after taking two or three steps, the side of her left foot caught on the edge of a hole in the sidewalk, slipped into it, and she fell with force and was seriously injured.

The storehouse at 2910 Fourteenth street was not built to the lot line, a bay window being approximately eighteen inches back of the line, and the door, in front of which the accident occurred, about four feet nine inches therefrom. The space between the store and the lot line was paved with cement bloeks of the same size as the sidewalk blocks. The testimony of appellants’ witnesses was that the hole or depression in the pavement was eighteen inches long .and twelve inches wide, with a depth of approximately six inches, and sloped towards the curb. The portion on the District property was less than two inches wide and eighteen inches long; the balance of the depression being on the property of appellant Altemus. The store building was occupied by one Philip Sures as tenant of Altemus. Sures .observed the hole in the sidewalk as early as May, 1926, and testified that it had increased in size from then until the day of the accident.

At the close of appellee’s ease in chief, both appellants made .unsuccessful motions for directed verdicts. Altemus elected to stand on his motion on the ground, first, that the evidence showed contributory negligence; second, because, his tenant having entire possession and control of the premises, he (Altemus) was not liable; and, third, because of fatal variance between the declaration and the proof, the former alleging joint liability, the latter showing several liability.

On appeal, both appellants assigned the grounds just hereinbefore mentioned (that with relation to the responsibility of the tenant being applicable to Altemus only), and, additionally, that the evidence did not sustain the judgment, and also to the action of the court in admitting evidence of subsequent repairs and also in admitting certain photographs and surveys in evidence. We shall briefly discuss these several points in their order.

Was appellee guilty of contributory negligence? She testified that on many occasions prior to the accident she passed the premises on Fourteenth street at the point where the injury occurred, and from time to time had noticed that the sidewalk was cracked and depressed, but did not know there was a hole, and on the occasion of her injury she was on the way to see a sick friend, and was not paying unusual attention to her surroundings.

As a general rule, a person using a sidewalk known to be defective will be held guilty of contributory negligence if he fails to exercise ordinary care for his own safety] Swart v. District of Columbia, 17 App. D. C. 407. But this does not mean that he assumes the risk of injury from every known defect or danger. Ordinarily a person may use the street as long as it is consistent with reasonable care to do so, and, in such circumstances, it is a question for the jury whether he was negligent in sc doing. Here it may not be said that the mere fact that appellant had knowledge of a defect in the street would preclude her right to recover for injury. The question of her contributory negligence, if any, was, in the circumstances mentioned, a question for the jury. See Lincoln v. Power, 151 U. S. 436, 441, 14 S. Ct. 387, 38 L. Ed. 224; Moshcuvel v. District of Columbia, 191 U. S. 247, 24 S. Ct. 57, 48 L. Ed. 179; Dewire v. Bailey, 131 Mass. 169; 41 Am. Rep. 219; Pomfrey v. Village of Saratoga Springs, 104 N. Y. 459, 11 N. E. 43.

The next assignment (confined to the appellant Altemus) is to the point that the tenant and not the owner is liable. In the case at bar the evidence shows that the tenant had been in control of the premises for several years prior to the happening of the accident, and City of Lowell v. Spaulding, 58 Mass. (4 Cush.) 277, 50 Am. Dec. 775, is cited as authority for the position that, where the owner has parted with control to a tenant the tenant, rather than the owner, is responsible for injuries to third persons in the absence of a covenant to repair, and in Security Savings & Commercial Bank y. Sullivan, 49 App. D. [877]*877C. 119, we announced substantially tbe same doctrine. But in the last named case we were careful to distinguish cases in which the owner retains control of a portion of the premises or where he leases different parts of the premises to different tenants with a common use of steps or landings, and likewise cases which involve appurtenances for the use of the general public and all persons connected with or occupying the building, and we said as to the latter the rule would not apply.

In the ease under consideration, the defect was in a part of the sidewalk which, though in front of the store leased to the tenant, was for use by the public and people having business in any of appellant’s properties. In such circumstances, the measure of responsibility of a tenant having exclusive possession and control does not attach. Here the property adjacent to the city sidewalk and not occupied by the building was by the act of the lot owner paved and connected up with the highway so that the line of separation between the two was destroyed, and this was the equivalent of an invitation to the public to use it all as a street. The fact that it was also essential in the practicable use of the leased premises did not of itself, and without something more, shift the responsibility of maintaining it in good order from the owner to the tenant, and this is true, if for no other reason, because the principle of implied responsibility on the part of the tenant grows out of exclusive possession, and, where that is lacking, the implication falls.

But this assignment should be denied on another ground. Law rule 23 in force in Washington abolished the plea of the general issue, and requires every pleading to set forth the true facts upon which the pleader relies. In response to this rule, Altemus filed several pleas in which he admitted maintaining the property where the injury occurred as a sidewalk, and defended on the ground that he had used due and proper care to keep it reasonably safe for travel by pedestrians. This admission, in our opinion, forecloses the right of appellant now to claim that he had no responsibility with relation to the sidewalk at the point in question. To permit a party to plead a certain definite state of facts and then afterwards to deny them to the injury of the party relying on them is contrary to settled principles of law. “Undoubtedly a litigant has no cause for complaint if the court accepts his solemn and sworn admissions in pleadings and testimony as true.” Larson, Jr., Co. v. Wm.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 874, 61 App. D.C. 148, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altemus-v-talmadge-cadc-1932.