Hair v. City of Lynchburg

181 S.E. 285, 165 Va. 78, 1935 Va. LEXIS 274
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 19, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 S.E. 285 (Hair v. City of Lynchburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hair v. City of Lynchburg, 181 S.E. 285, 165 Va. 78, 1935 Va. LEXIS 274 (Va. 1935).

Opinion

Chinn, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by Roy Hair, Jr., to recover damages for injuries sustained by him in diving from a [80]*80diving board at a public swimming pool maintained and operated by the city of Lynchburg in one of its recreational parks, upon the ground that the said injuries were caused by the negligence of said city in the maintenance and operation of the pool. After the evidence was all in, the defendant city moved the court to strike all of the plaintiffs evidence on the following grounds:

First: That in the operation and maintenance of the swimming pool, the city of Lynchburg was exercising a governmental function and, therefore, not liable for any negligence in the construction, maintenance, or operation of said swimming pool.

Second: That the evidence failed to show any negligence or lack of due care on the part of the said city which was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries.

Third: That the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.

The court below, without passing on the question presented in the first ground of the motion, sustained the motion on the last two grounds; whereupon the jury returned a verdict for the city, and judgment was entered accordingly.

It appears that the pool in question was constructed by the city in 1921, and has been operated as a public swimming pool each summer since that time. The pool has the necessary bath house, diving board, and other accessories, and the city employs the usual attendants necessary for the operation of a public swimming pool, including two life guards who are always on duty while the pool is being used. It is supplied with water from the city water system, and a fee of ten cents is charged each person who desires to enter the pool. The diving board referred to is located at one end of the pool, and at the time of the accident complained of was eleven feet ten inches above the surface of the water; and the water for a considerable area in front of and under the diving board was seven feet eleven inches deep. From this area the bottom of the pool sloped gradually upward to the shallow end of the [81]*81pool where it is said the minimum depth was only two feet.

Roy Hair, Jr., a resident of Florida, who in the summer of 1931 was spending his vacation near the city, came to the park and entered the pool on three occasions. The first time, according to his testimony, he did no swimming or diving, but merely waded around in the shallow part of the pool. On tire second occasion, he spent about forty-five minutes swimming in the deeper part of the pool, and dived a number of times from the diving board, several times making the same dive in which he was later injured. On the third occasion he came with friends, and they were in the pool swimming and diving for some twenty-five minutes before the accident took place.

He was at the time of the accident twenty-five years old, was an experienced swimmer and diver, and weighed 180 pounds. The injury occurred in making from the diving board what is called a “one and a half” dive. This dive is executed by springing forward from the diving hoard, making one and a half revolutions in the air, and entering the water head foremost. In making this dive the diver endeavors to so time his revolutions as to enter the water with his body in a practically vertical position. When he goes in straight down it is termed among expert divers as a “perfect one and a half.”

On this occasion Hair executed the dive in the above manner and continued to the bottom of the pool until he struck the top of his head with such force as to fracture two vertebrae in his neck. As a result he was at once totally paralyzed from his neck down.

It is contended by the plaintiff that the city was negligent in maintaining a diving board nearly twelve feet high over water approximately only eight feet deep, and much evidence was taken as to the location of diving hoards and the depth of water in other public pools, from which it appears that while there are no fixed rules on the subject, and it is generally recommended that a diving board twelve feet high should be located over water of greater [82]*82depth than that in the instant case, it is shown by the evidence of the plaintiff’s own witnesses that it is not an unusual thing to' find that other such pools have similar conditions as to the depth of water and height of the diving board as existed in the Lynchburg pool at the time of the accident.

The alleged negligence of the city in relation to the elevation of the diving board and the depth of the water is not, however, really relied upon by the plaintiff as ground for recovery. In fact these conditions seem to have little to do with plaintiff’s injury, for the reason that it appears from his own testimony, as well as that of his expert witnesses, that the depth to which the diver descends in making a “one and a half” dive depends upon not only how high he. springs in the air from the diving board, if he does so at all, but especially upon the angle at which he enters the water. It is shown that dives are frequently made at the pool, at an angle, from a height of twenty-five to thirty feet, and it is testified by plaintiff’s witnesses that in executing a perfect “one and a half” the diver will go to the bottom in water of much greater depth than that which existed in the Lynchburg pool, unless he uses his hand after his body becomes submerged to “flatten out” and plane to the surface, which is done by experienced and careful divers, regardless of the depth of the water.

It appears that the bottom of the pool in question is constructed of several inches of cement laid over rough stone. The pool is emptied of water each fall after the bathing season and remains empty all the winter, and due to the exposure to the cold the concrete frequently cracks and scales off in places, making it necessary, before the pool is filled for use in the spring, to repair the bottom by replacing the concrete where it is broken, which left the bottom in some places uneven and rough.

The plaintiff claims that on the occasion of his accident he caught on his hands when he reached the bottom, and if the bottom had been smooth his hands would have glided along the bottom and prevented his head from [83]*83striking, but due to the unevenness his arms “folded back,” causing his head to strike. In other words tire plaintiff attributes his injuries not to the depth of the water and the height of the diving board but to the condition of the bottom of the pool.

It is testified by the plaintiff and some of his expert witnesses that if the bottom had been perfectly smooth or made of glazed tile his hands would have slid along the bottom and prevented him from being hurt.

It is shown by the evidence, however, that, although the pool had been in operation from the year of its construction, 1921, until the time of the plaintiff’s accident in July, 1931, and thereafter until the trial of the case in the court below in December, 1933, that it was patronized by an average of more than 15,000 people during the swimming season of each year, and that the “one and a half” and other fancy dives had been made innumerable times from the same diving board, there had been no accident except on one occasion a drunken man was slightly hurt, and on another a boy who was learning to swim hurt himself slightly in some way.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.E. 285, 165 Va. 78, 1935 Va. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hair-v-city-of-lynchburg-va-1935.