City of Laurel v. Hutto

70 So. 2d 605, 220 Miss. 253, 56 Adv. S. 4, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 434
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1954
DocketNo. 39115
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 So. 2d 605 (City of Laurel v. Hutto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Laurel v. Hutto, 70 So. 2d 605, 220 Miss. 253, 56 Adv. S. 4, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 434 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Lee, J.

This is an appeal by the City of Laurel from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Jones County,'which, on the verdict of the jury, awarded Miss Beatrice Hutto the sum of $10,000 for personal injuries.

Miss Hutto’s declaration, in effect, alleged that on July 16, 1951, while she was walking along a pathway in the City’s Daphne Park, in a careful and observant man[259]*259•ner, she stepped in a hole, broke her leg, and sustained a serious injury; that the City knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care ought to have known, about the hole, because it had existed for a long time; that the City also knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care ought to have known, that the pathway was commonly used by the public both day and night; and that her injury proximately resulted from the failure of the City to exercise reasonable care to keep the pathway in a reasonably safe condition.

The City, by its answer, denied all material allegations of the declaration. It denied that there was a hole in the pathway and that the plaintiff received her injury in that manner. It alleged that a bridge over a ditch along this pathway was built for the purpose of enabling its employees to move their mowing machines across the ditch, and that the public was not invited to use the same. It also raised, as a defense in law, that, in the operation of its park, the City acted in a governmental capacity and not in its private or corporate capacity, and, for that reason, it was not liable.

The defense of immunity will be dealt with first.

It is true that in the case of Jones v. City of Amory, 184 Miss. 161, 185 So. 237, this Court observed that: “In the establishment and regulation of schools, hospitals, poorhouses, fire departments, police departments, jails, workhouses, and the construction of buildings for those purposes, municipalities act in their governmental, and not their private, capacity. ’ ’ The authorities, which sustain the above principles as the fixed law of this State, were collected and enumerated in the opinion.

But, in City of Pass Christian v. Fernandez, 100 Miss. 76, 56 So. 329, it was held that the operation by the city of a trash or garbage cart is a private or corporate purpose and not a governmental function.

This Court has repeatedly held that a city is liable for failure to exercise reasonable care to keep its [260]*260streets reasonably safe for nse by persons exercising reasonable care. See authorities in Byrnes v. City of Jackson, 140 Miss. 656, 105 So. 861. See also City of Greenville v. Laury, 172 Miss. 118, 159 So. 121; City of Hazlehurst v. Matthews, 180 Miss. 42, 176 So. 384; Ming v. City of Jackson, 202 Miss. 260, 31 So. 2d 900.

Besides, in Byrnes v. City of Jackson, supra, it was expressly held that “ * * * the rule making it the duty of the city to exercise reasonable care to make its parks reasonably safe places for people to resort to, and making the city liable for negligence, is the better rule.” In that case a bear in the zoo in Livingston Park had bitten and injured Mrs. Byrnes. It was there contended by the City that the zoo was a part of the education of the public, and therefore its operation was a governmental function. The Court rejected that contention by observing that “it is not such an education as the city is required by law to furnish to the public.” The distinction was made that the right was permissive' rather than mandatory.

In City of Columbia v. Wilks, 166 So. 925 (Miss.) where Mrs. Wilks fell through a hole in a walkway, maintained .by the city as an adjunct of its swimming pool, the city made the same contention, namely, that, in maintaining the swimming pool and walk in the park, it was eng’aged in a governmental, not a private corporate, function. But that contention was again rejected, and the Court adhered to the rule laid down in Byrnes v. City of Jackson, supra. See also City of Jackson v. McFadden, 177 So. 755 (Miss.).

The principle in the Byrnes case and in the Wilks case, supra, is decisive against the City’s contention here; and it is so well settled that we decline to overrule or modify it.

In the further consideration of this case, three questions are posed: (1) Did Miss Hutto fall in a hole in the pathway near a small bridge in the park? (2) Did the [261]*261City have notice of the hole? (3) Did the City permit the general public to use the pathway and bridge?

In brief, the evidence was as follows: Miss Hutto and Miss Reatha Little lived in an apartment just east of Daphne Park. About 8 o’clock in the evening of July 16, 1951, they were walking from their home across a part of the park to the swimming pool to attend a water carnival. They followed the course which they had pursued on many previous occasions, that is, a well defined pathway which led over a bridge across a small ravine. They could see the pathway and bridge. They did not see a hole, as no lights were nearby. In immediate proximity to the bridge, Miss Hutto’s left foot and leg went into and down a hole about 14 inches in diameter and a foot-deep. As a result, her ankle was dislocated and both bones of the leg were broken. Miss Little succeeded in getting her companion back to the apartment where she called a doctor, who came in a short time and sent her to the hospital. About noon the next day Miss Little went to the scene in order to get a shoe that pulled off Miss Hutto’s foot and became lost when she stepped in the hole. She found it on the bridge. One of the negro workmen, at the place, informed her that he had taken it out of the ditch. At the time, Miss Little looked under the bridge and found that the hole had been washed out from below. The ground was chopped up, and the hole had been filled with clods and dirt. There was no water in the ditch, and there had been no rain for sometime.

For four years Miss Hutto had used the pathway and bridge with different people. She had taken children to the park and swimming pool by that route, and had seen other people using it in crossing the park on Sundays and in the afternoons. Both she and Miss Little used the pathway in the daytime and at night. According to John Howard Flowers, Jr., there had been a bridge at that point since 1939. He testified to its general use by the public for a number of years. He had used it a few times [262]*262shortly before Miss Hutto’s accident. At times, E. D. Hurst used it himself, and saw it used extensively. He also said that the weather was hot and dry at the time.

Commissioner Smiley testified that it was his duty to make investigations of pathways in the park. He crossed the bridge often, every week or ten days; and if there had been any defect, he thought that he would have found it. The bridge was built out of crossties as a convenience for his workmen. His men, if they found a defect, either reported to him or went ahead and fixed it. In his opinion, anybody, who wished to cross the ditch, would use the bridge. There were no warning signs which forbade its use. He did not notice a pathway. His men were working around the bridgé" the day before the accident. He admitted that a person, going across the park from a point opposite Miss Hutto’s apartment to the swimming pool, would be in close proximity to the bridge.

John Jennings, an employee of the City, never noticed a pathway. Kearney Walker, a park employee, testified that he was in and about the bridge at least every ten days during the mowing season.

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Bluebook (online)
70 So. 2d 605, 220 Miss. 253, 56 Adv. S. 4, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-laurel-v-hutto-miss-1954.