Baltimore Asphalt Block & Tile Co. v. Klopper

137 A. 347, 152 Md. 529
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 137 A. 347 (Baltimore Asphalt Block & Tile Co. v. Klopper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Asphalt Block & Tile Co. v. Klopper, 137 A. 347, 152 Md. 529 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, rendered against the defendant in an action for personal injuries, alleged to have been occasioned through the negligence of the defendant. The record contains but one bill of exception, and this is to the ruling of the court in granting the first and second prayers of the plaintiff (appellee here), and refusing the first, second, third, fifth and seventh prayers of the defendant (appellant here).

The appellant is a corporation, and at the time of the alleged accident was engaged in the business of repairing and repaving streets and roadways, and had a contract with the State Hoads Commission for work to be done along Milton Avenue in the City of Baltimore from McElderry Street to Forth Avenue, a distance of approximately one mile. The work consisted in removing the cobblestones with which the bed of the street had been paved, taking out the curbing, repaving the street with sheet asphalt on a concrete base, and recurbing it. In recurbing the appellant was to use either the old stone curbing or new concrete curbing, as directed by the engineer in charge of the work. In the course of performing the contract, the appellant removed the cobblestones in a block on Milton Avenue extending from Monument Street northward, on or about June 12th, 1925, taking out the old curbing from this block from June 13th *531 to lotli, 1925. The testimony on this latter point is conflicting, the appellee fixing the date of the accident as June 23rd, 1925, and stating that the old curbing in this block was taken out the day before the accident. This conflict becomes immaterial in view of the manner of presentation of the question to this Court, because the jury was entitled to believe the testimony of the appellee on this point if they saw fit. After the removal of the cobble and gutter stones., the old curbstone was removed by inserting crowbars between the curbstone and the cement pavement of the sidewalk, prying the curbstone out into the street, where it was lying at the time of the accident, about two feet from the cement sidewalk; that is, the old curbing at the time of the accident was lying flat in the bed of the street, the edge nearest the pavement being about two feet distant therefrom, and there being an excavation, caused by the removal of the curbstone, of from eighteen inches to two feet in depth, between the edge of the sidewalk and the removed curbstone. The width of the old curbstone, as lying in the street, was about two feet. At the time of removing the old curbing by the appellant’s employees, there was caused a falling away of the earth directly under the edge of the cement sidewalk, extending back under the sidewalk for a distance variously testified to as being from three to six inches. Pedestrians were using the sidewalk along the Milton Avenue side of the plaintiff’s property, and there were no guards or ropes, along the edge of said sidewalk, and no warning signs of any kind.

The appellee occupied a restaurant at the northwest corner of Milton Avenue; and Monument Street, with entrances on both streets.. On the day of the accident a vendor of crabs drove his wagon into. Milton Avenue; and stopped opposite the appellee’s entrance on that street, and directly alongside of the curbing which had been removed and was. then lying in the street; thus placing the wagon about four feet from the edge of the cement sidewalk, two- feet of this, space being taken up with the flat curbstone lying in the street, and two feet from the inner edge of this flat curbstone to the edge of *532 the cement sidewalk, within which latter two feet was the excavation caused by the removal of the curbstone. The driver of the wagon went into the appellee’s place of business through the Milton Avenue entrance for the purpose of selling crabs, and wanted the appellee to go out and look at them. The appellee complied with this request, and went out of the Milton Avenue entrance, stepping from the pavement to the flat curbing lying in the street, and thence onto the wagon, for the purpose of examining the crabs. After making a purchase and directing the driver to bring the crabs into his place of business, the appellee stepped back from the wagon to the flat curbstone, thence to the edge of the cement sidewalk. In doing so' he placed his foot on the edge of the cement pavement, which gave way, resulting in a fall by which the appellee’s arm was broken. The record discloses that the appellee had no knowledge of the dangerous condition of the pavement, which at the point of the accident is about seven feet wide and was cracked along the edge adjacent to the street; that subsequent to the accident an examination disclosed that the supporting earth beneath the pavement had been removed or had fallen away; that after the accident the appellee went out to the place to see what had made him fall, and standing on the pavement and stooping over, he was able to see that the cement at that point was undermined.

The appellant makes three principal contentions in this case: First, no negligence shown on the part of the appellant ; second, the risk was assumed by the appellee; and third, the appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. We will consider these in the order named.

The appellant was engaged in repaving and recurbing the street at the point of the accident, and in the course of this work there was caused by the removal of the curbstone, or the manner in which it was removed, an excavation extending under the edge of the cement sidewalk from three to six inches. This left unsupported a portion of the sidewalk, which, upon the appellant stepping thereon, broke or gave way, causing the appellant to fall and resulting in the injury complained of. It was incumbent upon the appellant to know *533 that this danger existed, for the reason that the excavation' was caused by its employees., and either to have put- such temporary supports thereunder as to make it safe for pedestrians, or to have erected barriers of some kind sufficient to warn those passing along and over the sidewalk of the hidden, danger due to the excavation. The appellant failed to take either of these precautions, and its failure was the proximate cause of the accident. The sidewalk, and every part thereof, was open for use by pedestrians, and was, about the time of the accident, being used by pedestrians. Any one walking along or across, this sidewalk was entitled to rely upon its safety, and if he was injured by reason of the hidden danger, the existence of which was known or should have been known by the appellant, there is sufficient evidence upon which a jury may find primary negligence.

The plaintiff’s first prayer, under the facts of this case, properly submitted the question of appellant’s, negligence to* the jury. There are objections, made to the form of this prayer on the ground that it submitted to the jury a question of law, in that it left to> them to find that the plaintiff was lawfully using the sidewalk; and further, that there was no evidence in the ease to support certain statements contained in the prayer.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 347, 152 Md. 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-asphalt-block-tile-co-v-klopper-md-1927.