Bosin v. Oak Lodge Sanitary District No. 1

447 P.2d 285, 251 Or. 554, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 493
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 447 P.2d 285 (Bosin v. Oak Lodge Sanitary District No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bosin v. Oak Lodge Sanitary District No. 1, 447 P.2d 285, 251 Or. 554, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 493 (Or. 1968).

Opinions

LUSK, J.

, j Plaintiff, a boy aged four and one-half years, fell into a hole in the street which had been-dug by1-the defendants for the purpose of repairing a leak in'an underground pipe. Through his guardian ad litem1 the bpy, brought this action to recover damages for. 'the injuries sustained by him in the accident. Upon-the trial the court granted a judgment of involuntary nonsuit and plaintiff appeals. m :

‘ The sole question is upon the. sufficiency of’the evidence to prove that defendants were negligent as alleged in the complaint, to wit, in failing to cover the excavation so that small children would not fall into if and in failing to barricade the excavation so as. to prevent small children from playing in the dirt around it. ‘ ■

The scene of the accident was Schroeder Street-, a dead-end street in a residential district in Milwatlpe, Oregon. The hole was dug on Friday, April 22,. 1066, [557]*557and was left open over the week end. The dimensions hereinafter mentioned are approximate. The hole was four feet long at the bottom, seven to eight feet long at the top, not in excess of three feet wide at the top, and four and one-half feet deep in the middle, the deepest part. The bottom of the pipe was six feet below the surface of the street and a portion of the pipe six inches in length was left exposed when the workmen quit work on Friday. By that time the repair of the pipe had been completed.

"Before leaving the job the workmen placed, three feet from the hole, what are known as “Cantel Barricades,” the board at the top of which bore on one side in large letters the word “CAUTION” and on the other diagonal stripes. The testimony is in conflict ás to whether there were two, three or four barricades. The men" also piled dirt two feet high and two feet distant from the hole. According to Mrs. Bosin, mother' of the plaintiff, the dirt was piled all the way around the hole; but Harvey Scott, Manager of the Defendant Sanitary District, testified it was only along its westerly side. Mixed with the dirt was what is referred to asNclay stone.”

.It was conceded that the defendants could have placed a piece of plywood over the hole large enough to1 cover it.

.. On Saturday, April twenty-third, late in the afternoon, Mrs. Bosin and her children visited her friend, Mis.-.Salvesen, who lived on Schroeder Street. The hole:was in front of the driveway of the Salvesen hbuse.' Gregory went out of doors to play with other children and about an hour later, according to Mrs. Bogin’s .testimony, several children came running to the doór of the Salvesen house shouting “Greg’s in the [558]*558hole” and someone shouted “Greg fell in.” Clarence D. Connelly, father of some of the other children, ran to the hole and pulled Gregory out of it. He had no difficulty because of the barricades in lying down by the hole for the purpose of effecting the rescue.

Gregory sustained a severe cut on the forehead, which left a scar, and other injuries.

Pocholec v. Giustina et al, 224 Or 245, 355 P2d 1104, was a case of a trespassing child who fell into the defendant’s log pond and drowned. We there approved as the law of this state Dean Prosser’s summarization set forth in Prosser, “Trespassing Children,” 47 Calif L Rev 427, and which has been substantially adopted by the American Law Institute in 2 Restatement of Torts 2d, § 339, as follows:

“A possessor of land is subject to liability for physical harm to children trespassing thereon caused by an artificial condition upon the land if “(a) the place where the condition exists is one upon which the possessor knows or has reason to know that children are likely to trespass, and
“(b) the condition is one of which the possessor knows or has reason to know and which he realizes or should realize will involve an unreasonable risk of death or serious bodily harm to such children, and
“(e) the children because of their youth do not discover the condition or realize the risk involved in intermeddling with it or in coming within the area made dangerous by it, and
“(d) the utility to the possessor of maintaining the condition and the burden of eliminating the danger are slight as compared with the risk to children involved, and
“(e) the possessor fails to exercise reasonable care to eliminate the danger or otherwise to protect the children.”

[559]*559The rule applies generally to children whether trespassers or not, as explained in the Pocholec case, 224 Or at 251, and directly held in Summers v. Grant Park Baptist Ch., 243 Or 362, 364, 413 P2d 611. As stated by Dean Prosser in the article above referred to (47 Calif L Rev at 432): “[C]hild trespasser law is merely ordinary negligence law, and the fact that the child is a trespasser merely one fact to be taken into account, with others, in determining the defendant’s duty, and the care required of him.”

In Summers v. Grant Park Baptist Ch., supra, we held that the defendant was not charged with the duty of guarding a concrete light well, a part of a church building, with a grating in order to protect children in the churchground at the invitation of the defendant. The evidence showed that the plaintiff, a five-year-old girl, climbed upon the railing surrounding the well and fell to the bottom. The grounds of the decision were that the condition did not involve an unreasonable risk of bodily harm to children, that children appreciate the risk in playing on a railing such as that surrounding the light well and that it would be an intolerable burden on the landowner to require a guard at the light well which would prevent children from climbing to a precipitous place and falling off.

The defendants cite this case, but we think it distinguishable. The light well was a permanent feature of the building guarded by a railing in the usual way. The danger was created by the child herself when she climbed upon the railing. In that respect the Summers case resembles Hamilton v. City of Detroit, 105 Mich 514, 63 NW 511 (1895), relied on by the defendants. While the plaintiff in that case, a five-year-old boy, fell into a sewer trench, the fall came after the boy [560]*560had-climbed to a platform some five or six feet above the street level and was playing with a car used in the work of constructing the sewer. The part of the street where the work was in progress had been closed against travel and in these circumstances it was held that the defendant was not liable for the injury to the child, the court saying: “The injury cannot, therefore, be said to have resulted from a defective condition of the street, or from a failure to guard the excavation against injury to persons using the highway.” 105 Mich at 515.- The decision seems actually to turn on a question of causation.

•" '• Some courts take the view that, as stated in Prosser on Torts (3d ed) 380: “* * * [T]he possessor is free turely upon-the assumption that any child of sufficient age to be allowed at large by his parents, and so to be at all likely to trespass, will appreciate the danger and avoid it, * * *.” Among the perils to which this rigid rule has been applied, the author continues, are those of-’drowning in water, falling from a height or into an excavation. See cases collected in Annotation, -16 ALR3d 25, 102, § 11 (á). We gave careful consideratiomto this theory in Pocholec v. Giustina,

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Bosin v. Oak Lodge Sanitary District No. 1
447 P.2d 285 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
447 P.2d 285, 251 Or. 554, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bosin-v-oak-lodge-sanitary-district-no-1-or-1968.