Herring v. Philadelphia

10 Pa. D. & C.3d 59, 1979 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 348
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedApril 10, 1979
Docketno. 1596
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Pa. D. & C.3d 59 (Herring v. Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herring v. Philadelphia, 10 Pa. D. & C.3d 59, 1979 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 348 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1979).

Opinion

McDEVITT, J.,

— This case was heard before the Honorable John J. McDevitt, 3rd, and a jury from September 13 to 15, 1978. At the conclusion of trial, the jury entered a verdict of $20,000 in favor of plaintiff, Johnnie Herring, against the City of Philadelphia and St. John’s United Methodist Church, and a verdict of $2,857.15 in favor of his mother, Cynthia Herring, against the same defendants.

I. FACTS

The action arises out of injuries sustained by minor plaintiff on May 3, 1969, when a limb from a dead tree fell on him while he was playing on a vacant lot at 858 North Lawrence Street, Philadelphia. At the time of the accident, plaintiff was four years old. The lot where the mishap occurred was privately owned by St. John’s United Methodist Church, which had been left the property under a decedent’s will.

Evidence was adduced at trial that the tree in question had shown no sign of life for at least two or three years prior to the occurrence. Neighborhood children used the vacant lot as a playground, and a rope attached to one of the tree limbs served as a swing. Boys were seen swinging on the rope 15 minutes before the accident occurred. Various witnesses, including a representative of the local improvement committee, testified that they had com[61]*61plained to officials at the department of licenses and inspections about the hazard posed by the dead tree. In response to these calls, two officers for that department, a Mr. McCoy and a Mr. Morse, met with the community representatives. After inspecting the premises in question, they advised the improvement committee chairman, Fannie Polo, to contact the land utilization division of licenses and inspections. She did this, and a Mr. Lath from that office responded. At that point, Miss Polo testified:

“Q: Okay. And what took place at that meeting?

A: Okay. We showed him the tree.

The Court: How long after you talked to him?

The Witness: I think it was like three days later.

The Court: We’re talking about what year or what month of what year?

The Witness: It was early in ’68.

The Court: All right.

The Witness: He came out and we showed him the tree, and he told us it would take a long time if he had to go through the Fairmount Park Commission to get the tree cut down because any trees had to be removed had to go through the Fairmount Park Commission.

So, he told us we’d do better if he bought us an electric saw and we cut it down ourselves.

A week later, he didn’t show up. I called and he told us he was working on it.

The same thing, a couple of days later, we still didn’t hear from him. Same reply, he was working on it, it took time.

After that, we just kind of forgot about it until the tree fell on the boy.”

Medical testimony was produced that plaintiff sustained severe head injuries and has permanent facial scarring as a result of the accident.

[62]*62II. DISCUSSION

In bringing suit against the city, plaintiff basically relied on two theories: (1) that the city negligently permitted a dangerous and hazardous condition to continue, despite notice of its existence; and (2) the city negligently failed to provide for removal of the hazard after its agent promised to do so, which promise was relied on by the affected community.

With respect to both theories, the city argues that it is absolved from liability on the basis of Ricketts v. Allegheny County and City of Pittsburgh, 409 Pa. 300, 186 A. 2d 249 (1962). In that case, minor plaintiff was injured when she fell through the roof of a house that had been vacated by order of the county health department four months before the accident. The health department had cited the unsafe and dilapidated state of the structure as the basis for its order. The privately owned house was located across from a public playground, and after the tenants vacated, the building became an attraction for children from the heavily populated neighborhood.

In Ricketts, as here, plaintiff alleged that the municipal defendants were negligent because they failed to take measures to abate the hazardous nuisance of which they had knowledge. The Supreme Court rejected that theory; however, in doing so, it cited reasons that are extraneous to the facts sub judice. With respect to the City of Pittsburgh the Ricketts court held that the county health department was not an agent of the city and therefore the city could not be held hable for any action by officials of that department. As for the county, the court ruled that it was a subdivision of [63]*63the Commonwealth and thus shielded from liability by the doctrine of sovereign immunity.1

Despite the narrow holdings in the case, Ricketts is still instructive for present purposes in its discussion of the responsibility of a municipality for a nuisance on private property. The court stated:

“The appellants argue that a municipality is hable in tort for permitting a nuisance to be maintained in its jurisdiction and under its direct control, and further contend that a legal title is not necessary to hold a municipality hable for permitting the nuisance, merely the right to possession and direct control over the property. The appellants rely on Cooper v. Reading, 392 Pa. 452, 140 A. 2d 792 (1958); Pintek v. Allegheny County, 186 Pa. Superior Ct. 366, 142 A. 2d 296 (1958). In reviewing the Reading case, we find an entirely unrelated situation because in that case the city, pursuant to an easement, discharged its storm drainage water into the bed of a former canal which formed a pool where two boys drowned. In this case the city had control of the land. In the Pintek case the County of Allegheny bought the property involved with two other taxing bodies at a tax sale and rented the property out to tenants.

“In the present case, neither of the defendants acquired title, possession, or maintained, contributed to or in any way were responsible for the conditions which existed on the private premises where the trespassing plaintiff was injured. . . .

[64]*64“The Allegheny County Department of Health was under no obligation to find that the structure constituted a public nuisance, especially when it is extremely doubtful if such a finding could have been justified. The only danger the house created was one to immediate trespassers and to no one off the premises.” 409 Pa. 300, 304-5, 306.

Thus, aside from its actual holding, the court seemed to be saying that a city has no duty to abate a nuisance on private property, when the city is not in possession of the land and there is no danger to persons off the premises. Plaintiff herein, as in Ricketts, was technically a trespasser. While that fact does not reheve the property owner of certain duties, the city would not have responsibility in that situation under the Ricketts rationale. We believe that rationale is still applicable today, and therefore hold that the city herein could not be held hable merely because its agents were aware of the nuisance and took no action to correct the same.2

However, there remains plaintiff’s second theory, that the city should be held hable by virtue of its agent’s promise to provide a saw for cutting [65]*65down the tree. Specifically, plaintiff invokes section 323, Restatement, 2d, Torts, which provides:

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Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. D. & C.3d 59, 1979 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-philadelphia-pactcomplphilad-1979.