Del Gaizo v. Dreyfus Properties, Inc.

45 Mass. App. Dec. 93
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 29, 1970
DocketNo. 7393; No. 4556
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Mass. App. Dec. 93 (Del Gaizo v. Dreyfus Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Del Gaizo v. Dreyfus Properties, Inc., 45 Mass. App. Dec. 93 (Mass. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Connolly, J.

This action, of .tort for personal in[95]*95juries is based on a fall alleged to have been suffered by the plaintiff as the result of the negligence of the defendant in the maintenance of certain premises it owned in Medford, Massachusetts.

In Count I of the declaration, the plaintiff alleges that on the 4th day of March 1967 the defendant, Dreyfus Properties, Inc. owned, maintained, or controlled a certain premises and did maintain the same in a defective condition, as a result whereof melting snow was caused to accumulate and freeze upon the said premises creating a nuisance in the nature of an icy sidewalk, and as a result of which the plaintiff, while in the exercise of due care, was caused to slip and fall.

In Count II, the plaintiff alleges the defendant, Dreyfus Properties, Inc. owned, controlled and maintained a certain premises in a defective condition, as a result of which melting snow was caused to accumulate and freeze upon the premises, and as a result of the defendant’s said negligence, the plaintiff was caused to slip and fall.

In Count III of the plaintiff’s declaration, the plaintiff alleged the defendant owned and controlled certain premises and that a certain curbing thereupon between the parking area and the sidewalk area was negligently constructed so that it was abnormally and unusually high thereby causing a defective condition which created a nuisance. As a result of said [96]*96negligence, the defendant was caused to fall upon the premises.

The defendant’s answer contained pleas of a general denial, contributory negligence, assumption of the risk, and failure to give proper legal notice.

Prior to trial, the defendant made a motion for specifications and specifications were filed by the plaintiff. The specifications requested by the defendant were:

“1. In what manner the defendant was negligent.

“2. In what respect there was an artificial accumulation of snow and ice. ’ ’

The specifications filed by the plaintiff were:

“The defendant was negligent in that the defendant, their agents, servants or employees cleared the snow and ice and in doing so negligently allowed or negligently caused remaining snow and ice to melt and accumulate causing the snow and ice to freeze. After the defendant, Dreyfus Properties, Inc. their agents, servants or employees negligently cleared away snow and ice knowing that business invitees would enter upon the premises and knowing that they, the Dreyfus Properties, Inc. had invited and induced persons to walk on the premises and causing said premises to become slippery and dangerous causing a nuisance; that it was the duty of the defendant to keep said premises in a reason[97]*97ably safe and suitable condition for all persons who came upon said premises as a result of the invitation or inducement of the defendant; that regardless of said duty and due to the negligence of the defendant, his agents or servants, the said melting snow had so collected on the premises of the defendant as to freeze, causing the plaintiff, to whom the defendant owed a duty of furnishing a reasonably safe ingress or egress to or on the defendant’s property or place of business, to fall.
The plaintiff further says the defendant was negligent in that the curbing directly in front of Zayre’s Department Store which was the access, ingress or egress from the parking area was so negligently constructed that it was abnormally and unusually high causing a dangerous and/or defective condition; that it was the duty of the defendant to keep and maintain the said premises in a reasonably safe and suitable condition for all persons who came upon said premises as a result of the invitation or inducement of the defendant; that the plaintiff, while always in the exercise of due care was caused to trip and fall because of the abnormal and unusually high curbing which was negligently constructed and caused a nuisance; that the Dreyfus Properties, Inc. knew of such condition but failed to correct the nuisance within a rea[98]*98sonable time knowing that through their inducement and invitation the public would enter upon the premises.”

At the trial, there was evidence tending to show the following:

(quoting from the Report)

“The plaintiff, Anna DelGaizo, 58 years of age, lives at 187 Gardner Avenue in Hing-ham. On the day of the accident she was visiting her daughter in Everett, and in the afternoon, they went to Medford to go shopping. They parked the car in the lot opposite Zayre’s store in the Plaza Shopping Center around 2:30 P.M. The parking area was cleared off, but there were patches of ice on the lot and on the curbing in front of Zayre’s store. It had snowed that day or the day before. There is a sidewalk in front of the stores, and you step up onto the sidewalk from the parking lot. The curbing of the sidewalk was about one and one-half feet high, extra high, not the usual height. As she came up to the curb to step up onto the sidewalk, she put her foot up to step up. The curbing was higher than a regular curb, too high. There was ice on the curb and ice on the bottom of the parking lot. I tripped and slipped and fell. The plaintiff indicated that as she stepped up from the surface of the driveway, she hit her right foot against the side of the curbing.
[99]*99“On cross-examination to the attorney for Zayre’s, the plaintiff said, ‘When I went to step np onto the curb, I didn’t go high enough, I didn’t get to the top of the curb. My right toe hit the side of the curb, and I went forward, then my left foot slipped on the ice on the parking lot, and I fell onto the sidewalk’.
“The plaintiff’s daughter testified. She was walking ahead of her mother. The curbing in front of the store was extra high. ‘I was with her when she fell. I got on the curb before she did. I turned around, I was going to help her up, because I noticed the curb was high. She started to come up and fell before I could help her’. She saw her mother slip on the ice. The top part of her right foot did not reach the top of the curb. There were patches of ice on the parking lot beside the curbstone.
“It was agreed that no written notice of the date, time, place, and cause of this injury was given to the defendant, Dreyfus Properties, Inc. until June of 1967, and copy thereof was introduced.
“Winston Fifield, employee of the defendant, Dreyfus Properties, Inc. testified that this shopping center was built upon a dump, and that periodically the land settled. That in July 1966, he first became aware that the parking area had settled causing a variance of curb height any[100]*100where from five inches to more than twelve inches above the grade of the parking area. He didn’t like the looks of this condition then, and he assumed this was a hazardous condition. It was conceivable that someone could fall in that area. The premises was sanded and plowed on February 24, 1967, and the next time on March 7,1967. On the day of the accident, the curbing varied in height from five inches to more than twelve inches above the grade of the parking area, and this condition was rectified by bringing up the grade of the parking lot to a level of five inches all along in front of the shopping area in June, 1967.
“Thomas J.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Mass. App. Dec. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/del-gaizo-v-dreyfus-properties-inc-massdistctapp-1970.