Armstrong v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co.

233 N.E.2d 610, 13 Ohio App. 2d 35, 42 Ohio Op. 2d 106, 1967 Ohio App. LEXIS 355
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 1967
Docket8584
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 233 N.E.2d 610 (Armstrong v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co., 233 N.E.2d 610, 13 Ohio App. 2d 35, 42 Ohio Op. 2d 106, 1967 Ohio App. LEXIS 355 (Ohio Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

Troop, J.

Plaintiff in the trial court, Helen Gale Armstrong, sought recovery in damages for injuries suf *36 fered in an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County. She alleges that the injuries resulted from a fall induced by tripping over a curb box installed by the defendant, The Ohio Fuel Gas Company, on a public sidewalk in the city of Columbus. It is claimed that the offending curb box extended one and one-half to two inches above the surrounding sidewalk and that the defendant negligently caused or permitted the condition to persist.

Issues were joined and the cause came on for trial. Counsel for the plaintiff addressed his opening statement to the court, a jury having been waived, at the close of which defendant made a motion for judgment in its favor on “the opening statement as well as all allegations in the petition which is before the court.” The trial court afforded counsel for the plaintiff further opportunity to add supplementally to the petition or to the statement of facts. Oral argument of both plaintiff and defendant was directed to the motion. The trial court sustained the motion of the defendant for judgment on the petition and the opening statement, explaining in considerable detail the basis for the result reached.

Judgment was entered by appropriate entry. It is from that, judgment that this appeal is taken, supported by a single assignment of error, that the trial court erred in dismissing the petition of the plaintiff and entering judgment for the defendant as set out above.

Counsel for the plaintiff, appellant herein, urges this court to re-evaluate its decision in Boyer v. Columbus (1965), Case No. 7668, decided January 12, 1965, and suggests that its application should be strictly limited to suits against municipalities. It is further urged that re-evaluation should include a survey of earlier Supreme Court cases upon which this court relied. The fear is expressed that soon the rule will be that “negligence, or the lack of it, as a matter of law will become a matter of measurement and dimension alone with no possibility of a jury question being presented.”

An exhaustive discussion appears unnecessary in view of the thorough approach of the trial court in its decision. As background to present thinking, a series of eases in *37 volving municipal corporations should be noted. The classic case is Kimball v. Cincinnati (1953), 160 Ohio St. 370, the syllabus of which reads as follows:

“A variation of from one-half to three-fourths of an inch in the heights of adjacent sections of a sidewalk is a slight defect commonly found in sidewalks, and the municipality in which such sidewalk is located is not guilty of a violation of the duties imposed upon it by Section 3714, General Code, by reason of the existence of such defect.”

Kimball was followed by Griffin v. Cincinnati (1954), 162 Ohio St. 232; O’Brien v. Toledo (1957), 167 Ohio St. 35; Gallagher v. Toledo (1959), 168 Ohio St. 508; Buckley v. Portsmouth (1959), 168 Ohio St. 513; Amos v. Cleveland Heights (1959), 169 Ohio St. 367; and Kindle v. Akron (1959), 169 Ohio St. 373. Boyer, supra, was decided by this court in 1965. The similarity of these cases, except Griffin, is apparent upon examination. Griffin moves away ’ from the others suggesting that whether a defective condition, an elevation in a sidewalk of two inches in a triangular hole, is a qualified nuisance is a question for the jury to consider, along with all the attendant circumstances, when the city has constructive notice. Whatever the effect of Griffin, it is minimized by the concurrence of four judges of the Supreme Court when in Gallagher, supra, they held that Griffin was no longer controlling where it is" inconsistent with O’Brien, supra.

As noted, these cases involve municipal corporations. . As to them several propositions seem clearly established. A city is not an insurer. While a city has statutory responsibility for the exercise of reasonable care in the maintenance of its sidewalks, a defect must be substantial before it is unreasonable. Differences in elevation as between sidewalk slabs of three-eighths of an inch to two inches have been scrutinized by the courts, and it seems that any elevation less than two inches is not a substantial defect. Similarly, a triangular hole, a crack one and one-half inches to one and three-fourths inches wide, loose stones in an area near the elevation, a sewer catch basin cover, and a waterline valve- box four inches wide, have all passed muster in Griffin, O’Brien, Gallagher, Buckley and Boyer. Finally, *38 that where only these minimal defects, or “trivial departures from perfection,” appear, there is no question for the jury and a motion for a directed verdict for the defendant is proper. This last proposition is supported particularly by Kimball, O’Brien, Amos and Kindle.

It would seem accurate to say that there was some thought, judicial (see White v. Standard Oil Co. [1962], 116 Ohio App. 212) and otherwise, that the series of decisions just reviewed, and others, were induced by a deep sympathy for trouble-beset municipalities seeking to maintain hundreds of miles of sidewalks for the convenience of the citizenry. The spectre of an increased tax load raised a voice protesting a too high or a too rigid standard of care for the city. Because of peculiar circumstances municipalities were thought to be alone in a distinct category in which the owner of private property and the private entrepreneur would not be found.

The notion that the owners of private property were in another class or category, owing to their invitees the common-law duty of ordinary care, was encourged by the decision of the Supreme Court in Smith v. United Properties, Inc. (1965), 2 Ohio St. 2d 310. This decision involved two cases begun in the Common Pleas Court of Franklin County. Smith alleged an offending difference of three-fourths of an inch in elevation between paving blocks, and Schilliger a difference of one-half inch. Both cases were concerned with the paving, or walks, in a shopping center. Defendants demurred in both cases and were sustained by the trial court. The final orders were reversed by this court, and the defendants appealed to the Supreme Court.

By a four-to-three decision the Supreme Court affirmed the decisions of this court, holding that patrons and customers of a shopping center are invitees toward whom the owner owes the common-law duty of ordinary care or that degree of care exercised by an ordinarily reasonable and prudent person under like or similar circumstances. Paragraph three of the syllabus, to which reference is later made, reads as follows:

“3. All the attendant circumstances must be consid

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Bluebook (online)
233 N.E.2d 610, 13 Ohio App. 2d 35, 42 Ohio Op. 2d 106, 1967 Ohio App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-ohio-fuel-gas-co-ohioctapp-1967.