Becker v. City of Mitchell

250 N.W. 31, 61 S.D. 523, 1933 S.D. LEXIS 90
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1933
DocketFile No. 7483.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 250 N.W. 31 (Becker v. City of Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. City of Mitchell, 250 N.W. 31, 61 S.D. 523, 1933 S.D. LEXIS 90 (S.D. 1933).

Opinion

*524 WARREN, J.

This action for damages was instituted by the plaintiff for injuries sustained by her slipping and falling on defendant’s sidewalk. The plaintiff is a widow fifty-seven years of age. She sustained injuries in the form of a broken and dislocated hip bone, also bruises and injuries to her body, limbs, back, and spine, and was confined to a hospital for some over six months. Verdict and judgment being in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant has appealed.

It would appear from the evidence that the place where the accident occurred was just a little ways south of the city hall, and was in full view of the windows ¡of the offices of the mayor and the city engineer, and that some of the officials passed this place every day in going to and from their offices. There is. also evidence that the city had the ground adjoining the sidewalk where the accident occurred leased at the time of the accident, and had had such ground leased for some time prior to the accident. There is also evidence to the effect that at the place of the accident the sidewalk was lower than the ground surrounding it, and that the sidewalk was bulged up in the center so as to slope both ways; that there were depressions in the sidewalk and that whenever it rained or the snow melted the water from the adjoining land would run onto the sidewalk and, because of the depressions, would accumulate there and remain on the sidewalk and in cold weather the water froze and formed ice on the sidewalk.

There are six different assignments of error why the judgment should be reversed, some of which will be treated as pertinent to our decision; the others need no consideration in the conclusion that we will hereinafter reach. The correctness of the court’s instructions to the jury is not raised and we need not burden this opinion with the correctness of the defendant’s request and the instruction as given, as there is no exception to the instructions as given by the court.

An examination of the evidence discloses the fact that the sidewalk was so constructed that water from rain and melting snow would gather thereon and during the cold weather would freeze and cause a slippery surface; that on the second of January, 1930, such an icy condition existed, the ice being “as smooth as glass”; that the ice was covered with a light snow which had fallen early that morning thereby obscuring said icy condition from *525 plaintiff’s observation; that the snow and ice were permitted to accumulate on the sidewalk and that it had not been removed; that this icy condition of the sidewalk on which she was injured was and had been in existence for some time prior to her injury. There is evidence tending to show that the officers and agents of said city had actual knowledge of the state of repair of said sidewalk, but that they had neglected to remedy the defect.

The respondent in support of her judgment does not claim that the city was negligent in its failure to remove the snow from the sidewalk the morning of the accident, but she does claim that the city was negligent in permitting the sidewalk to get into such condition as to allow an accumulation of snow, water, and ice on it for a long period of time so as to create a dangerous condition for those attempting to use the sidewalk; that the city was derelict in permitting the sidewalk to be maintained at a lower level than the adjoining land; that it permitted the sidewalk to bulge in the center so as to form ditches on either side of the middle and the adjacent land; that it was negligent in making no provisions for the draining off of the water which accumulated thereon, and in permitting ice to remain on said- sidewalk for weeks at a time; that all of said acts taken together contributed to the accident for which the city is liable.

During the trial of said case several of the witnesses testified that people who lived on Rowley street were, at the point where plaintiff fell, often compelled to walk out in the street to avoid walking in the slush, water, and ice which accumulated there because of the low level of the side walk, and that during the winter people avoided the place because of the ice which froze there and caused a dangerous condition. Mrs. Davis, one of the witnesses, testified that three weeks before the plaintiff fell and was injured, she herself fell on the ice in approximately the same place where plaintiff fell and was injured. She further testified that this icy condition had existed for more than three weeks prior to the time she fell, and continued to exist throughout the winter. Another witness testified that in the spring of 1930 -he went out and dug a ditch from said sidewalk to the street to allow the waters which had accumulated thereon to drain off into the street.

Both the plaintiff and defendant admit the presence of ice on the sidewalk, but appellant contends that this icy condition of the *526 street was caused 'by a sleet storm the morning of the second of January, and claims that said slippery sidewalk was due to a sleet storm and that said appellant is not guilty of negligence and should not be adjudged liable for injuries resulting therefrom.

It seems to be the established law of our state regarding such circumstances that a city cannot be held guilty of negligence in failing to remove from its streets smooth ice caused by recent sleet storms, and that a city is not liable where the accident resulted from the slipperiness of the walk caused by a sleety condition existing over the city resulting from such recent sleet storm. However, upon the trial this matter was submitted to the jury and became an issue of fact, and the testimony shows that only one person, an emplo3'ee of the city, testified to such a sleet storm, while several witnesses testified negatively. From the testimony the jury might conclude that while there was a little snow on the morning of January 2, 1930, as testified to by plaintiff, still there was no sleet storm, and therefore any ice which had formed on the sidewalk must have formed1 there previously to the morning of January 2nd.

The appellant further contends that because the ice on which respondent fell was smooth glare ice, the city is not liable, and further states that it is a well-established rule that the mere slipperiness of a sidewalk occasioned by glare ice or snow resulting from natural causes is not sufficient to charge a municipality with liability for injury resulting therefrom where the walk is properly constructed and there is no accumulation of ice and snow as to constitute an obstruction. It appears from the evidence in this case that the city had permitted said sidewalk to become deeply imbedded in the earth, since it was lower than the level of the banks on either side of it, and' that due to said catch basin water, slush, and ice were allowed to accumulate there.

We have examined many authorities concerning liability of cities in cases where the ice is rough, and in hummocks and mounds, if left on sidewalks for an unreasonable length of time. In the case at bar, on account of the sidewalk’s being low, and therefore causing water to stand in the low place or catch basin, it would fall within the rule announced in paragraph C on page 449, 15 Am. & Eng. Enc.

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Related

Kirkegaard v. City of Sioux Falls
8 N.W.2d 862 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
250 N.W. 31, 61 S.D. 523, 1933 S.D. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-city-of-mitchell-sd-1933.