Cordish v. Bloom

113 A. 578, 138 Md. 81, 1921 Md. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 113 A. 578 (Cordish v. Bloom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cordish v. Bloom, 113 A. 578, 138 Md. 81, 1921 Md. LEXIS 56 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee sued Abraham Cordish, Frank Schwartz and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore!, for injuries alleged to have been sustained by him by reason of hisi falling on the sidewalk in front of the premises, owned by Cordish and occupied by Schwartz as tenant, known as Eb. 1022 E. Baltimore Street. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of Schwartz, but against Cordish and the City for $4,000. Separate appeals were taken by Cordish and the City from a judgment entered on the verdict against them. Sixteen exceptions! were taken to the rulings of the lower court on testi *83 mony and the seventeenth bill of exceptions presents the rulings on the prayers, one of which was offered by the plaintiff as to the measure of damages and granted, the first, second and third of the city were refused and four were granted, and those of Oordish marked No. 4 and No. 5 were granted and No. 1-A, No. 3-A, No>. 6-B and N>. 8-B were refused — the rejected prayers seeking to take the case from thei jury either on the ground that there was no legally sufficient evidence to entitle the plaintiff to recover, or that there was contributory negligence.

There is a cellar under the building and an opening in the sidewalk. The opening is in front of a bay-window, or show-window, as one of the witnesses called it. There is what is spoken of as a frame for the iron door1 over the opening, which is a part brick and part stone, and is about four feet long and about three feet wide. The iron door is a quarter of an inch thick and is attached to the stone of the frame work by two knuckle hinges, so that it opens towards the building-up against the hay-window. When the door is dosed it overlaps the frame a few inches, and at the building line there is an opening of five-eights of an inch between the frame and the cellar door, which gradually tapers to nothing at the end towards the curb of the sidewalk being about one-eighth of an inch at a point half way along the door. The top of the door at the building line! is about three inches above the level of the pavement and at the lower end about two and one-quarter inches. The sidewalk is paved with cement and there is a curve of cement from the sidewalk level to the top of the frame, on the east side of it. The sidewalk is about twelve feet wide, leaving an unobstructed space between the frame work of the cellarway and the curb of about nine feet.

The plaintiff testified that he was walking westerly on Baltimore Street on the way to his work, between half past seven and eight o’clock in the morning, that three or four young ladies were walking in a line, aim in arm, and he stepped out of their way to let them pass, when his right foot caught between the frame and the cellar door, that he tried to pull *84 his foot out, fell over and broke his leg. He said that before he was hurt the young ladies had passed him and, in reply to the question how far in front they were when he got to the cellar door, he answered: “Two and a half or three feet; something like that.” He also said that there were a great many people on the pavement at the time, and that he did not know that the cellar door was there, as he usually went to his work another way. He testified that he had on narrow pointed shoes and “it caught me between the cellar door and the frame.” He was asked how close he was to the building line when the tip< of his shoe got caught in the opening”, and replied, “About the middlei of the door; I cannot tell exactly.” He testified that there was an abrasion on the shoe and his daughter confirmed him as to that. A witness produced by the plaintiff testified that there was quite a crowd walking” along the street at the time of the accident, and he was1 behind the plaintiff and saw him fall; that “there was a stone where the cellar is and he fell over that,” and when asked: “You know what part of the cellar he fell on; did you see exactly how he dropped ?” He answered: “He fell on to* the cellar.” A witness called by the defendant, Oordish, testified: “He gave a sudden slip> and fell, by his slip, he fell on his leg on the door of the cellar and he held out his hand to' me and I picked him up.” When asked what caused him to fall, he said: “Just a sudden slip', a sudden push, it was slippery; he fell on the door of the cellar.”

There was thus some conflict in the testimony as to what caused him to fall but that was, of coursei, for the jury, if the case was to be submitted to it, which is the most important question for us to decide. If he in fact fell as described by the witness for the defendant, referred to above, we would have no hesitancy in holding that the plaintiff could not recover, for we would not be willing to hold that there could be a recovery simply because there was a cellar door there in the sidewalk which, being slippery that morning, caused the plaintiff to fall. Ho municipality nor abutting property owner could be held responsible for an injury thus1 caused, *85 without imposing a burden which would be unreasonable, and if imposed would prevent the use of parts of sidewalks for purposes which in cities and towns are practically essential to the proper and reasonable enjoyment of property abutting on public streets, and in large cities would require the abandonment of the nse of important spaces- under parts of sidewall® for cellar entrances, coal chutes, vaults, etc-., which would result in serious losses and a waste of valuable space, which can be properly utilized without causing much, if any, inconvenience to the public. But if the accident was caused as the plaintiff claims, them, another question is presented. While a municipality must generally respond in damages for injuries caused by its negligence, acts or omissions, especially in connection with the public streets and sidewalks under its care and control, there must be a limit to such liability, and it cannot be held responsible for injuries caused by every depression, difference in grade, or unevenness in sidewalks, fío city, town or village could maintain a perfectly level or even surface in all of its sidewalks without burdening the property owners with unreasonable and unnecessary taxation, fío resident or visitor of a city, town or village has the right to expect such conditions. Pavements will in timei become irregular and uneven from roots of trees, heavy rains and snows or other causes- Steps, porches, areaways, entrances to cellars, coal chutes and many other things have been and are, still permitted on sidewalks in cities and towns, small and large, but there should be proper regulations!, depending upon the location and the ordinary use of the various streets, aud hence it is difficult-, if not impossible, for courts -to announce rules and principle-si which can be made applicable to all cases involving alleged nuisances or negligence. The Court of Appeals said in Terry v. Perry, 199 N. Y. 79, 20 Ann Cases, 796 : “This Court has frequently stated the rules of law governing munioipalities in the care of their streets- a-nd sidewalks. Each case must stand upon its own peculiar facts aud the application of such well known rules of law to such facts.”

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 578, 138 Md. 81, 1921 Md. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordish-v-bloom-md-1921.