Grube v. Mayor, Etc., of Balto.

103 A. 948, 132 Md. 355, 1918 Md. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 27, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 103 A. 948 (Grube v. Mayor, Etc., of Balto.) 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
Grube v. Mayor, Etc., of Balto., 103 A. 948, 132 Md. 355, 1918 Md. LEXIS 47 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

*356 Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Joseph Grube, a boy between 10 and 11 years of age, sued the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore and the Consolidated Gas Electric Light and Power Company, of that city, for injuries received by him as a result of his climbing upon a pole in a schoolhouse yard owned by the city, which had been planted there by what we will speak of as the Consolidated Company. The yard was used as a playground by the children who attended the school and others. There was an iron fence around it about four and a half feet high, and about four years before the accident the pole was planted in the neighborhood of a foot from the fence, for the purpose of carrying electric current to the building. The pole was twenty-six feet high, and had two crossarms on it at the top-, upon which there were wires. There was a small iron pipe which ran along the pole, into which the wires were run and then under the ground in conduits into the schoolhouse. Originally there were spikes in the pole from the ground towards the top* for the employees of the Consolidated Company to climb upon, as is customary. The yard was divided into two parts—one side being for girls and the other for boys. The pole was on the boys’ side. The evidence shows that at one time gates in the fence were kept locked when the ground was not intended to be used, but the locks were broken off and for some time before the accident the gates were left open. Boys played in the grounds after school hours, on Saturdays and holidays, and they frequently climbed on the pole. A man described as the engineer at the school, who was called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified that about a year before the accident he and the superintendent pulled the spikes out of the pole far enough above the ground to prevent the boys from reaching them, so as to keep them off the pole. In answer to a question whether the plaintiff could reach spikes from the top of the fence, that witness answered: “Hardly; I can not reach it myself.” But the plaintiff testified that, “I got on the fence and then got hold of the pole, *357 and just swung myself out to the foothold and then climbed up to the top and then got on the sill.” In another place he said: “I held my hand up and got hold of the fence and then put my hand on the pole, or little pipe, and then swung myself around to the foothold and was around there and then climbed up.” Again lie said: “Q. What kind of a foothold do you mean, those iron spikes? A. Yes. Q. About how high above the fence was the first spike; could you reach it from the fence when you were standing on the fence? A. Yes. (The Court) : You were standing there on the top of that rod and you reached up and took hold ? (The Witness) : I could reach up my hand and take hold of this here. (Mr. Sturtevant) : Take hold of the pipe, do you mean? (The Witness) : The pipe, yes; and then swing myself around. L son Id reach the spikes, and I put my feet between this pole and then climbed up and sat on here.” He then got up, and apparently was resting on the crossarm and probably with his foot on a spike. In some way he slipped, and in doing so grabbed a wire and soon fell to the ground. His hand was badly burned, and he had what is called “a stellate fracture” -of the skull, which is a fracture running in different directions. He was unquestionably badly injured.

The boy bad climbed on the pole to watch a game of baseball. The accident occurred in August, during the summer recess of school. The evidence shows that boys had frequently climbed the pole and, were constantly being driven from it. This hoy had climbed it before, although it was rot shown whether he had been driven away. He said: “Sometimes I climbed up there for kites and then I climbed up there just for fun.” He said be saw other boys climbing up the pole for kites and they did not get hurt, so he started to climb up and he went up there that evening to watch the game.

It could scarcely be contended that either of the defendants was guilty of negligence, or would be liable to an adult of ordinary intelligence who was injured under similar cir *358 cumstances. There can he no more reason for holding the defendants liable for this injury because the pole was a foot inside of the fence than, if it had been on the outside of the fence, on the pavement. Indeed, if a comparison be made as to which would be most dangerous much could be said to show that a pole on the outside might be. It would not stop boys from climbing, to see a baseball game or for other purposes, and there would be other1 dangers on the highway which would not be as imminent on'the inside of the fence. If the pole had been erected on the highway to carry the electric current to the school building and someone had been hurt by it, it might have been argued that it ought to have been in the yard. But the decision in Stansfield v. C. & P. Tel. Co., 123 Md. 120, conclusively establishes the fact that there can be no liabiltiy in this case, unless there must be some exception to the general rule there clearly announced, by reason of the age of the plaintiff. In that case the pole supporting wires carrying electric current for telephone and lighting purposes was in one of the highways passing through Ellicott City, and was in front of the dwelling occupied by Harry Stansfield and his family. There were spikes in the pole, intended for the use of the defendant’s employees, and it was alleged in the narr. that various persons, including Harry Stansfield, as the defendant well knew, had been accustomed to use thei spikes to climb the pole, in order to recover personal property and for other purposes; that the defendant negligently permitted the insulation on some of the wires to be insufficient. A pet kitten of the children of the unfortunate man had' climbed on the pole and, the children being greatly distressed, he, “relying upon said invitation and representation, of the defendants, ascended the pole by means of the spikes for the purpose of recovering the kitten and satisfying his children”; that the spikes, being, conveniently arranged for such use, operated as an invitation to the public, and more particularly to the owners and occupiers of abutting properties to ascend the pole by means of the spikes, *359 whenever they might have occasion to do so for any proper purpose, and that the spikes constituted a representation that the ascent of the pole might be accomplished with safety;, and that he, relying on the invitation and representation, and being ignorant of the hidden danger, came in contact with insufficiently insulated wires and in consequence of the contact was instantly killed. A demurrer to the narr. was sustained, and the appeal was taken from a judgment entered on the demurrer for the defendant.

We held, Judge TTrnek delivering the opinion, that the principle of implied invitation was not applicable; that the alleged permissive use of the pole by the deceased and others might relieve them of the character of trespassers, but would leave them in the position of mere licensees to whom the defendants would owe only the duty to avoid exposing them willfully to the risk of injury, and in a forcible opinion it was clearly shown that there could he no recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A. 948, 132 Md. 355, 1918 Md. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grube-v-mayor-etc-of-balto-md-1918.