City of Memphis v. Trice

13 Tenn. App. 607, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 8, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 607 (City of Memphis v. Trice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Memphis v. Trice, 13 Tenn. App. 607, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 103 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.-

This is an appeal by the City from a judgment for' $7,000 damages for the death of Ray Trice, a boy about seven and a half years of age. We will state the facts so far as we think material^' in the terms of the contention of plaintiff.

*608 In the City of Memphis there is a block of property lying on the west side of Delaware Street owned by the Phelan estate. Originally there extended across this property a ravine or deep gully leading to the Mississippi River not far away, which was a natural surface water drain. This ravine, years ago, extended across Delaware Street, but when this street was improved by the City in 1910, a culvert was built across the street at the site of the ravine, to take care of the natural drainage and the street was filled over the culvert.. The outlet of the culvert was only a few feet on the Phelan property.

The fill made by the City over the culvert tapered downward on to the Phelan property, so in order to give lateral support to the west margin of the street, and to prevent the fill from sloughing a wooden bulkhead was first built by the City a few feet west of the sidewalk and on the Phelan property. But the discharge of the water from this outlet so near the street, caused the fill to slide and a cave in of the west side of the street and of the sidewalk resulted.

To remedy this dangerous condition the City, a short while later, entered upon the Phelan property under the power of eminent domain, but without taking any notice whatsoever of the property owner, and built a concrete retaining wall on the Phelan property about 30 feet west of the west property line along Delaware Street, which wall originally extended across the ravine from bank to bank. This wall was so built that its top was about seven feet below the grade of Delaware Street and about nine feet below the grade of the yards of the premises on both the north and south sides of the ravine.

Immediately after the completion of the wall, the City partially filled with dirt the space between the street and the wall, and thereafter the City carts dumped, and the City permitted others to dump, refuse and rubbish into this space until finally the space was filled to a level with the street at the sidewalk, but only to within two feet of the top of the retaining wall. The difference in the height of the fill at the wall and at the street made an incline from the street to the wall — a drop of nine feet in about 27 feet, or a fall of one foot in three feet being a grade of 33-J per cent.

In the construction of the retaining wall the concrete culvert was extended from the street to the wall, and an opening about, five feet square was left in the wall for the culvert outlet, the bottom of this opening being nine feet above the dirt bed of the ravine. The only water which passed through this culvert in dry weather was. a small continuous stream which the City had allowed a nearby manufactory to. discharge for years into the drain leading to *609 the culvert. But in rainy weather, surface water of great or less volume according to the rainfall, poured or gushed through the culvert outlet and fell nine feet to the dirt bed of the ravine below. The action of this falling water in course of time eroded a hole in the bed of the ravine immediately at the base of the wall, which hole was about six feet deep and about 20 feet in circumference and extended from bank to bank of the ravine, which banks were very steep. This water hole which was invisible to any one on Delaware Street or on the inclined space (unless one should go to the wall and look over), had existed continuously for years and was continuously filled with water.

During the years the wall had been erected, the surface water which fell on the inclined space, seeking an outlet into the ravine, flowed around the ends of the wall, gradually eroding the dirt between each end of the wall and the adjacent bank of the ravine, until spaces several feet wide were washed' out between the ends of the wall and the adjacent hanks, which spaces extended from the top of the inclined space to the bed of the ravine, a drop of some 20 feet. These spaces formed precipitous slides, especially at' the south end of the wall, extending directly from the top of the inclined space around the end of the wall, to the water-hole beneath.

For years the inclined space on the Phelan property between the street and the wall had been frequented daily by the children of the neighborhood as a place to play. There were on the inclined space, rocks, tin cans and rubbish of all kinds, and one of their diversions was to go to the wall and “chunk” rocks into the waterhole. On the banks of the ravine west of the wall there was much under-growth and trees.

During all this time the sloping space, about 50 feet wide along Delaware Street, had remained unenclosed, both where it abutted Delaware Street and along the north and south banks of the ravine, although there were cottages on both the north and south sides of' the ravine and within a few feet of the adjacent ravine banks. There was never a fence or other guard or protection, prior to the accident, in front- of the sloping space on Delaware Street' nor along the banks of the ravine on the Phelan property. Neither was there any guard or protection of any kind elsewhere on the sloping space or at the retaining wall to protect persons from falling over the wall or around the ends of the wall. There was never any protection whatsoever over or around the water-hole. And there was never a sign or other warning on or about the premises calling attention to the dangerous conditions which existed there.

*610 About six weeks before the accident Joseph IT. Trice moved his family to a small workman’s cottage on Indiana Street near the corner of Colorado Avenue. Indiana Street is the street next east of Delaware Street and this cottage was thus a little more than a block away from the scene of the accident.

Prior to the accident little Ray Trice had never visited the dangerous spot on the Phelan property where the neighborhood children were accustomed to congregate for play. Neither of his parents had ever given him permission to go there to play and neither one of them knew that he had gone there to play on the day of the accident. Ray was about seven and a half years old and he attended school.

On Saturday, March 24, 1928, his father, having a day off from work, walked with his son Ray about noontime to a grocery several blocks north of their home on Indiana Street. On returning from the grocery, Ray asked permission of his parents to visit a playmate, Irvin Person, who lived on Arkansas Street, the street next, east of Indiana Street. This permission was given and Ray left home to visit Irvin. Another playmate, Johnnie Cotton, lived next door to Ray.

Apparently Johnnie, Irvin and Ray met at Irvin’s house. All three were about the same age. Irvin had been down to the place in question on the Phelan property on previous occasions to play. Evidently at his suggestion the three boys, without the knowledge or permission of Ray’s parents, went there this Saturday noon, just before lunch to play.

When these three boys arrived there, three other small boys were already there playing, viz., Edwin Mayberry and his younger brother and L. E. Aldrich.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 607, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-memphis-v-trice-tennctapp-1931.