Daniel v. Morency

165 A.2d 64, 156 Me. 355, 1960 Me. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 9, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 165 A.2d 64 (Daniel v. Morency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel v. Morency, 165 A.2d 64, 156 Me. 355, 1960 Me. LEXIS 31 (Me. 1960).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

This is an action on the case instituted on October 30, A. D. 1958 by the plaintiff for her bodily injuries and other special damages arising from a public nuisance, Restatement of The Law, Torts, Chapter 40, Page 218, Introductory Note; R. S., c. 141, §§ 6, 18; Smith v. Preston, 104 Me. 156, 162.

Defendant was a garage proprietor. In the public sidewalk in front of his place of business he maintained a gasoline pump. To the south, in the sidewalk but in front of the adjacent premises defendant had a metal filler pipe which *356 covered the inlet pipe serving to fill the tank below defendant’s gasoline pump. The pump and filler cap had been at their respective locations for several years. The sidewalk top surrounding the filler cap had been concrete but a week before March SO, A. D. 1958 the city had tarred the sidewalk. Prior to such resurfacing the filler cap had rested level with the bordering sidewalk but thereafter the filler cap was left sunken 1% inches in an encircling orifice of bituminous coating. The sidewalk was 0y% feet wide and on a flat plane. Prom the center of the filler cap to the curb line of the sidewalk the distance was 2 feet. The gasoline pump 16 inches square and 5 feet in height stood 8 inches from the same curb and was located some 8 feet north of the filler cap.

The filler cap was of cast iron and 6 inches in diameter. It was horizontal and had 3 holes in its diameter line, each of which was y% inch deep. The center hole was 1 1/16 inches square. The other 2 were elliptical with their smallest diameter 1*4 inches. The square hole accommodated a wrench or tool in removing the cap for the filling of the gasoline tank or for measurement by stick of the tank’s contents. The other 2 holes afforded purchase for the fingers of one lifting off the filler cap.

Just before 11 A. M., March 30, A. D. 1958 was clear, sunny, dry and somewhat cold. There was neither snow nor ice. The plaintiff stood on the sidewalk 1 foot away from and inside the curb line and south of the filler cap. She was talking to a friend and was facing the building south of and adjacent to the defendant’s garage. She turned and proceeded north along the sidewalk a few steps, caught her heel in the filler cap, stumbled, fell against the gasoline pump and landed prostrate upon the sidewalk. She was seriously injured.

The plaintiff alleges that the defendant had adopted the use of the filler cap which in its dangerous condition consti *357 tuted a nuisance, that he did so negligently and that his negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries and damage to the plaintiff who had exercised due care withal. Plaintiff was awarded a jury verdict. Defendant here prosecutes several exceptions properly reserved.

One exception is to the refusal of the presiding justice to grant a motion of the defendant for a directed verdict in favor of the latter because of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff was the only witness to the incipient phase and efficient cause of her unfortunate fall. Her testimony is more authentic than any paraphrase could be.

“I turn around, took a few steps, and then I was walking and my heel went into somethings to cause to turn my foot, and when I did I lost my balance.
“Q. Have high heels?
“A. Not too high, but high enough.
“Q.---did you know there was an opening in the sidewalk? Gasoline fill pipe?
“A. No, I didn’t know.
“Q. Did you look at the sidewalk to see where you were going?
“A. Yes.
“Q. What were you doing at that time?
“A. Just minding my own business on the way to church.
“Q. And do you know what happened to your shoe with relation to that opening?
“A. Well, as I stepped I just fell. I didn’t have no change (chance?) or any — my heel there, — I fell.
“Q. And, specifically, where was your heel at that time, you say you fell?
*358 “A. Right in that filler pipe there.
“A.---I just make a couple of steps, and into that hole I went, and then I lost my balance.---
“A. I turned and I make a few steps, and then I feel my heel go in the hole, and then I turned my foot---
“Q. Did you see the filler at that time ?
“A. I didn’t see the hole, no, just see the sidewalk and start walking---of course, I look down. It was all black and I didn’t.---
“A. Yes, when I turned around I looked where I was going, or, started looking, and start walking.
“Q. And you didn’t see the filler cap, or did you?
“A. No, I didn’t.
“Q. You didn’t see the filler cap at all?
“A. No.
“A. Well, when I stepped in then I saw it, when I stepped in it I see it then.
“ Well, I stepped, I looked. But my heel down there, and, of course, I would see it.
“Q. Which did you see first, the hole or the filler cap?
“A. Well, I don’t really know.
“Q. Well, can you tell us what it looked like when you saw it?
“A. Yes. I can see that round thing, and it was higher than the sidewalk was. Higher than that cap. When I step, I step right in that hole, and that was the cause of my fall.
“A. Well, what I stepped in it, of course, I turned around after I fell. That is the way I saw that. *359 After I had my fall I look around, where is it I step into.
“Q. And you told us while you were on the sidewalk, after your fall, that you saw this filler cap, is that right?
“A. When I get up, somebody help me to my foot, and I look around, and I saw what I have where I fell.
“Q. Do you recall it was while you were somewhere in the vicinity of those pumps you looked over and saw the filler cap ?
“A. Yes, when they take me up I turn around.
“Q. ---do you know its color?
“A.---I think it was kind of a yellow color, if I remember right. I don’t know.
“Q. ---when you first started to fall did you look down there again?
“A. Yes.

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Bluebook (online)
165 A.2d 64, 156 Me. 355, 1960 Me. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-v-morency-me-1960.