City of Big Spring v. Fletcher

156 S.W.2d 316
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 21, 1941
DocketNo. 2195
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 156 S.W.2d 316 (City of Big Spring v. Fletcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Big Spring v. Fletcher, 156 S.W.2d 316 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

O. D. Fletcher and wife, Lola Eva Fletcher, brought this suit against the City of Big Spring seeking to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by Mrs. Fletcher as the result of a fall on or from a sidewalk in said city. Primarily the ground of recovery alleged was the maintenance of a nuisance. The alleged nuisance consisted of the allowance or maintenance “for more than two or three months an opening in the said sidewalk [that is, the sidewalk between two named streets] in the shape of holes, crevices and gaps, near the edge of the sidewalk or described as the step from the pavement up to the main sidewalk in that a portion of said sidewalk or step was chipped and broken leaving a large crevice or hole and gap, approximately 12 inches of the concrete step wasted or broken away with approximately 3 or 4 inches in the upper portion by the edge of the sidewalk; that at the point where this chunk of concrete was broken out of this portion of the walk and steps, the sidewalk is approximately 18 or 20 inches higher in elevation than the street and that this auxiliary or secondary step at the curb is part of the sidewalk and approached thereto * * (Italics ours.) Three other grounds of recovery based upon negligence were alleged “somewhat in the alternative” and “in addition to the facts” alleged to constitute a nuisance and liability therefor as follows: (2) Failure to “repair and cause to be repaired the said defective portion of said sidewalk after actual or constructive notice thereof having been had”; (3) failure to maintain a sufficient light at the point of the alleged defect; and (4) failure to maintain a barricade or a warning notice or flare at such point.

In a jury trial only issues embraced in the above second ground of recovery (negligent failure to repair alleged defects) were submitted to the jury. The plaintiffs made no motion for a peremptory instruction or judgment in their favor, and hence it is assumed that there was no evidence sufficient to support any of the other three alleged grounds of recovery. They are deemed to have been waived. The verdict of the jury being in favor of the plaintiffs, judgment was rendered accordingly, from which defendant has appealed.

Hereafter Mrs. Fletcher will be referred to by name, or as plaintiff, and the City of Big Spring as the City or defendant.

By the verdict of the jury it was found that “on the 3rd day of February, 1940, there existed a break or defect in the sidewalk in question”; that defendant “by the use of ordinary care by and through its agents, servants and employees would have known of the existence of such break or defect prior to February 3, 1940”; that the “failure * * * [of Defendant] to repair such break or defect * * * prior to the 3rd day of February, 1940, constituted negligence”; that such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s fall and that damages resulted from the fall in sums aggregating $158.90. From all the evidence it appeared conclusively that there were two bréales in the sidewalk near together but disconnected, one comparatively large, the other small. The larger break was described in the pleadings as set forth in the foregoing statement, with exception of the italicized clause. Interpolated in such description was the italicized clause constituting the only mention in the pleadings of the smaller break. That clause read in the light of its context would, expressed in full, be as follows: With approximately 3 or 4 inches in the upper portion by the edge of the sidewalk wasted or broken away.

Thus, it appears that plaintiff’s petition itself gave no notice of any independent importance to be attached to the smaller as distinct from' the larger of the two “breaks” in the sidewalk. There was no suggestion that such smaller break was in and of itself the cause of the fall or that the City had any actual or presumed notice of it, or that its existence was alone negligence or a proximate cause of the injuries. In other words, the two “breaks” were treated as a unity and all the allegations of nuisance, negligence, notice, proximate cause and damages had no special or independent reference to either one of the two breaks, but to both as a unity. The special importance of the smaller break as distinct from the larger was disclosed by the evi[318]*318dence in the case. It is deemed a fair statement of the substance of plaintiff’s testimony bearing- upon the point that as she started to step off the sidewalk onto a concrete step about 6 inches below and about 12 to 14 inches above the street, she stumbled and fell out into the street landing 3 or 4 feet from the step. She said •there was a crack on top of the sidewalk proper and first said her left foot hung in the crack and started her to falling and that as she started falling her right foot stuck in the (larger) hole in the step and threw her into the street; but she amended her testimony and as corrected it was to the effect that when she stepped, not knowing there was a crack, she felt something throw her and it turned her foot under her and she tried to catch with her other foot and missed and went down and struck a rock in the other (larger) loose hole. As to the size of the two breaks, cracks or holes she said the one in the step was 12 or 18 inches (wide or long), the whole step being broken through and the one on top of the sidewalk where she first felt her ankle turn was between two and four inches “kind of slanting inward.” On cross-examination, being asked if she said her shoe heel hung in a crevice her answer was “it did not exactly hang, it turned. It caused me to stumble. There was a rough place * * * the concrete is broken out in a cup like place with the rock there.” As to the size of the (smaller) break she said: “I judge it is 1½ or maybe two inches deep at the deepest part next to the step leading down.” Later asked if she said what caused her fall was her heel turning in the top crevice, she answered: “I couldn’t state that was all the cause of it, but my foot did give way and before I knew what happened I was in that [large] hole and struck my ankle against the rough edge * * * I didn’t become over-balanced only when my ankle turned and the pavement caught me and threw me to the s.econd step and grazed me. * * * I started when my foot struck in this crevice and the loose rock threw me out in the street; the [loose rock] was laying angling in that place [large hole] there might have'been others but this large piece of concrete was what was loose.”

The case for the plaintiffs was not made stronger by any other evidence. If it could be said that there was evidence to support a finding to the effect that had there been no break, crevice, or hole in the middle step between the step and top of the sidewalk (large hole) Mrs. Fletcher would not have fallen and, of course, would not have sustained the injuries resulting from such fall, then so far as any question of liability might be involved it would, perhaps, be immaterial that initially the fall was caused by the comparatively small break, crevice or hole in the top of the sidewalk. The case which such a condition would present would be that of concurring causes of an injury, one of which was negligence, and, therefore, rendering immaterial whether the other was or not, or was a proximate cause.

The top of the paved sidewalk was 18 or 20 inches higher than the adjacent paved street. Plaintiff so alleged and the evidence so showed. Between the street and top of the sidewalk was a concrete step about 6 or 8 inches below the top of the sidewalk. One break, crevice or hole ^the large hole) was in this concrete step and practically amounted to a destruction of the step for a space of 12 to 18 inches.

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W.2d 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-big-spring-v-fletcher-texapp-1941.