Gnau v. Ackerman

179 S.W. 217, 166 Ky. 258, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 683
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 19, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 217 (Gnau v. Ackerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gnau v. Ackerman, 179 S.W. 217, 166 Ky. 258, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 683 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

In August, 1911, Jokn Ackerman, a little boy between two and three years of age, sustained severe, painful and permanent personal injuries by falling into a bed of slaking- lime, commonly known as a mortar bed, wbicb had been placed in the carriageway of Magnolia Avenue, one of the streets of the city of Louisville. To recover damages for the injuries so sustained, he brought this [260]*260suit by his father as next friend against P. J. Gnau, the •owner of the adjacent building in which it was intended to use the mortar that was being prepared for use; T. F. House, who had the contract for building the house, and the city of Louisville.

The petition, after making the usual averments in cases of this kind, further set out “that the mortar bed was in the depression made in the center of a pile of sand, and had the appearance to children of an ordinary sand pile and in its nature was attractive and alluring to and did attract children of tender years, including the infant plaintiff, all of which was or could, by the exercise of ordinary care, have been known by the defendants and each of them'; but, nevertheless, they failed to guard or barricade the mortar bed so as to exclude children therefrom.”

On the first trial of the case there was a verdict in favor of appellee for one thousand dollars, which was subsequently on motion of appellee set aside by the trial court, and on the second trial of the case there was a judgment in favor of appellee for ten thousand dollars against Gnau, the city, and House, one third, as found by the jury, to be paid by each of them. It appears that House is insolvent, and' so no appeal is prosecuted from the judgment against him.

The facts are substantially as follows: The defendant Gnau, who was the owner of a lot on Magnolia Avenue, obtained a permit from the city to erect a house thereon, which permit carried with it the right to make use of the adjacent street in accordance with the city ordinance on the subject. This ordinance provided that when a building permit was issued the applicant therefor might use a designated portion of the street in front •of the premises being improved for the purpose of placing thereon building material. And in accordance with this permit and the ordinances of the city, the mortar bed in question was. placed in the carriageway of Magnolia Avenue. The pile of sand had been placed in the street some days before the lime bed was made, and the children of the neighborhood had been playing in this sand from the time it was placed in the street until a few hours before the plaintiff fell into it. The lime bed, however, was not made in the sand nor had the lime commenced to be slaked until late in the afternoon of the day on which the plaintiff was injured.

[261]*261The parents of the plaintiff lived in a house about a hundred feet from this mortar bed, which consisted of a bed of sand probably twelve inches deep and about nine feet long and twelve feet wide, with a bed of slaking lime in the center. Between seven and eight o’clock at night the plaintiff ran out of his mother’s house into the street and went immediately, as any child would, to this bed of sand, and in a moment afterwards his screams were heard by J acob Loeb, who was passing, and he at once went to the bed, took the child out and carried him to his mother. The little boy was horribly burned. His left hand was totally destroyed and his right hand was badly burned, as were other parts of his body.

The only substantial dispute in the evidence grows out of the widely differing testimony as to whether this sand pile was barricaded or protected in any manner after the lime bed had been made. Witnesses for the plaintiff said that there were no boards or other barriers around the pile, or any covering on top of it, and that the sand pile, the center of which had been hollowed out for the purpose of containing the lime to be slaked, was about eighteen inches high around the edges, while witnesses for the defendant said that the sand pile with the lime in the center was enclosed by boards and also covered by boards.

If the precautions described by witnesses for appellants had been taken it seems very improbable that the child could have gotten in the bed of slaking lime, and the weight of the evidence tends to support the view that there was no barrier of any kind placed around the ;sand pile or any covering placed on top of it. There was an electric street light nearby, and some of the witnesses say a red lantern had been put up at the sand pile, but whether the lantern was there or not, the electric light was sufficient to plainly disclose to any adult person using the street the presence of the mortar bed; but of course this little boy gave no heed to either the red light, if there was one, or the electric light. He only knew, in his childish way, that there was a sand pile there, and into that sand pile he wanted to and did go, totally ignorant of the burning lime in the middle of the sand and unconscious of the danger of playing in or about it.

The city moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor because the evidence showed that it did not have any notice of the fact that lime had been put in the sand [262]*262bed for tbe purpose of slaking between tbe time it was placed there and the time of the accident, a few hours afterwards.

There would be much force in this position if it were necessary to bring notice home to the city in order to>. charge it with liability for the accident. But it is well settled in this State that where a city authorizes work to be done and a part of its street to be obstructed by material while the work is in progress, it must take notice of the nature and character of the obstruction which it has authorized. City of Louisville v. Keher, 117 Ky., 841; Blocher v. Dieco, 30 Ky. L. R., 689; De Garmo v. Vogt, 151 Ky., 847; Town of Bellevue v. Rentz, 152 Ky., 426.

The further argument is made for the city that although the plaintiff introduced in evidence a permit issued by the city to Gnau, the ordinance of the city granting to persons having permits to build the right to use portions of the street for the purpose of placing building material thereon was not offered in evidence and therefore the plaintiff failed to prove that the city had authorized Gnau to use the street.

Under Section 2775 of the Kentucky Statutes, the courts are required to take judicial notice of the ordinances of the city of Louisville, and this statute dispenses with the necessity of introducing these ordinances in evidence. It was no more necessary to introduce the ordinance of the city relied on than it would have been to introduce a section of the Kentucky Statutes under which an action was brought. Weiss v. Commissioners of Sewerage, 152 Ky., 552.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 217, 166 Ky. 258, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gnau-v-ackerman-kyctapp-1915.