Holbrook v. City of Monroe

157 So. 566
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 1934
DocketNo. 4922.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 157 So. 566 (Holbrook v. City of Monroe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. City of Monroe, 157 So. 566 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff sued for $15,000, alleging damages she received when she fell upon a main, street in the city of Monroe, because of a defective sidewalk.

Defendant denied any negligence and put the case at issue.

The lower court rejected plaintiff’s de-' mands and she has perfected an appeal to-this court.

There is very little conflict in the testimony on any issue in. the case; in fact, the case might have been submitted on a statement of facts, which the testimony discloses to be as follows:

Plaintiff, who lives at Olarks, La., a distance of about forty miles from the city of Monroe, drove from her home to Monroe, in company with two of her brothers, on ‘the-morning of September 29, 1932, in a truck which they parked north of De Siard street and east of block two of said street. The two brothers were strangers in Monroe and plaintiff had only visited that city twice before. After leaving the truck, the three walked to De Siard street and turned east on the north side of said street, thei*1 destination, being a dentist’s office farther east on the street. When they reached a point in front of a business house, in which the Hoinberg, Jewelry Company was doing- business, plaintiff stepped into a hole, tripped, and fell to-the pavement, fracturing the upper end of the femur bone where it connects with the pelvis, and also injuring her shoulder and back. Plaintiff was carried to the dentist’s office, then to the St. Francis Sanitarium, where she remained until the 11th day of February, 1933, under the care of the city’s physician and entirely at the city’s expense. She was then sent in an ambulance to her home in Clarks, where she was confined toiler bed and treated by Dr. Mecom, at the expense of the city of Monroe.

At the time of the accident, plaintiff was-walking by the side of one of her brothers, she being next to the curb, the other brother walking behind her; the time was about 1ft *567 o’clock a. m. The street on which she was walking was a main business street and the sidewalk is probably the most traveled sidewalk in the city. The width of the sidewalk at the place of the accident from the face of the building to the face of the curb is 8.14 feet. The fall plaintiff received was caused by her stepping into an open water cut-off, the inside dimensions of which were .2 of a foot, or nearly 2½ inches. The heel of her shoe caught in the cut-off box and tripped her. The outside of the cut-off box was 9 inches from the curb and the inside of it was nearly one foot from the curb. The cut-off box was open and had been since the year 1980. One witness testified that in 1930, he used this cut-off box to cut the water off in his place of business and at that time he kept a bucket turned over it, which bucket, due to the concrete having broken away around the box, would be flush with the sidewalk when placed over the cut-off box.

On the day of the accident, the city engineer found a hole broken out around the cut-off box, in the concrete, which was .5 of a foot wide and .6 of a foot long and 1¾ inches deep. The measurement was taken from the top of the sidewalk to the dirt which had filled in around the outside of the cut-off box. From the testimony, it can be seen that this had filled in since 1930. From the top of the cut-off box, which was flush with the pavement, to the dirt or silt which had partially filled the cut-off box, was one foot. This cut-off box was at the extreme west edge of the broken out place in the pavement, and therefore the first part of the defect in the sidewalk which plaintiff would reach in traveling east on said street. .

The record discloses that numerous other persons were traveling on the sidewalk and going in the opposite direction from that which plaintiff was going, she necessarily keeping to her right, and being to the right of her brother, with whom she was walking, was naturally placed on that part of the sidewalk where the defect was located. The water cut-off box was supposed to have a cap or top on it which would ifiake it flush with the top of the sidewalk. This top or cap had not been on the cut-off box for several years. After the witness who kept the bucket turned over the cut-off box moved away from this locality, which was in 1930, it was not unusual to find a large “Stop” sign placed over this cut-off box, and on numerous other occasions it was wide- open with nothing over it

The only legal questions in the case are:

First, was the defect as above described of such a nature as to make the city liable for injuries caused to plaintiff by stepping into the cut-off box with the heel of her shoe and being thrown to the pavement?

Second, did the city have actual or constructive knowledge of the defect?

The heel of plaintiff’s shoe was 1½ inches long, which is an ordinarily reasonable heel for a woman to wear. It is common knowledge that the average heel on a woman’s shoe is small enough to enter a pipe such as this cut-off pipe was, the diameter being 2½ inches. To leave such a pipe open on a much-used sidewalk in a city is clearly a defect in the sidewalk and is not a trivial defect, but is more on the order of a trap which is calculated to cause injury, at least to feminine pedestrians, who wear smaller shoes and smaller heels on them than men.

It is a well-recognized principle of law that municipal corporations owe it to the public to keep the sidewalks in such condition that pedestrians, who are ordinarily careful, will not be exposed to injury. The right of the ^citizen to recover damages for injuries sustained by reason of the failure of the municipal corporation to discharge the municipal duty imposed upon it is beyond question. Lemoine v. City of Alexandria, 151 La. 562, 92 So. 58.

All that is required of a pedestrian upon a sidewalk is ordinary care and this does not necessitate his looking constantly where he is going. He has a right to assume the sidewalk is safe for travel, and where one sustains injuries by reason of the unsafe condition of a sidewalk, the burden to show that he was not using ordinary care, or contributed to such injuries by his own negligence, rests upon the corporation. Lemoine v. City of Alexandria, supra, and eases cited thereunder.

It cannot be said that plaintiff herein was not using ordinary care when she stepped with her heel into this small pipe, which was practically flush with the surface of the sidewalk. To so hold would be equivalent to finding that a pedestrian is required to keep his eyes glued to the sidewalk and to look where he was stepping before each step, which is not the law in this state or any other state of the Union. The very fact that the open pipe was only 2½ inches in diameter made it more of a trap and less likely to be seen than if it had been much larger. We therefore conclude that the defect was sufficient and such a one as to cause the city of *568 Monroe to be liable for the injuries received by plaintiff, caused by her stepping into the pipe with the heel of her shoe and being thrown to the pavement.

The second question, as to the knowledge of the city, is covered by McQuillin’s Municipal Corporations (2d Ed.) vol. 7, p. 240, in the following words:

“Constructive Notice Based on Length of Time.

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Bluebook (online)
157 So. 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-city-of-monroe-lactapp-1934.