Honaman v. Philadelphia

183 A. 446, 121 Pa. Super. 262
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 12, 1935
DocketAppeals, 226 and 227
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 A. 446 (Honaman v. Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honaman v. Philadelphia, 183 A. 446, 121 Pa. Super. 262 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The wife-plaintiff in this case was pushing a baby carriage along the brick sidewalk on the north side of Parkside Avenue, a street bordering Fairmount Park, in the City of Philadelphia, while a group of boys were *264 playing baseball in an adjacent portion of tbe park. As sbe passed about ten feet to tbe rear of tbe borne plate of tbe diamond, a foul tip struck ber in tbe face, as a result of which sbe lost several teeth and eventually tbe sight of one eye.

In their joint suit against tbe city, sbe and ber bus-band charged tbe municipality bad been negligent in that it “caused or permitted tbe said public park to be used as a baseball field to tbe endangering of tbe safety of persons lawfully using tbe said sidewalk,” and, although it bad ample and timely notice of existing conditions, failed to have tbe baseball field removed or tbe sidewalk closed, to public travel; and in that it failed to have tbe sidewalk “properly or adequately guarded or protected,” or to cause any “notice or warning to be given” of tbe danger to pedestrians.

Tbe learned trial judge, taking tbe view that tbe responsibility and liability of tbe city was tbe same as that of a private owner of a similar property, abutting on a highway, denied tbe city’s motion for binding instructions and submitted tbe questions of its negligence and tbe wife-plaintiff’s alleged contributory negligence to tbe jury.

Verdicts of $2,000 for tbe wife-plaintiff and $500 for her husband were returned; tbe city’s motions for a new trial and for judgment n. o. v. were denied; and these appeals by tbe municipality from tbe judgments on tbe verdicts followed.

Under tbe conclusions we have reached, neither tbe question of the wife-plaintiff’s contributory negligence nor the refusal of a new trial need be considered. In support of their averments of negligence upon tbe part of tbe city, plaintiffs developed these additional facts:

Tbe field where tbe baseball game was being played was not separated from tbe sidewalk upon which tbe injured plaintiff was walking by any barrier, wire screen or back-stop. For many years it had been the *265 custom of the boys of the neighborhood to use the field as a baseball diamond; and in the course of time the paths between the bases and between the pitcher’s box and the home plate had been worn bare. The diamond was so arranged that the path between third base and the home plate roughly parallelled the sidewalk, at a distance of about ten feet. The course of a ball pitched from the pitcher’s box to the plate was therefore diagonally toward the street, at approximately a 45-degree angle. As a result of the proximity of the diamond to the street, thrown balls or foul balls not infrequently escaped the catcher or other players and went over the sidewalk, and there was evidence that on a previous occasion such a ball struck an automobile. While this, apparently, was the diamond most frequently used, it was the custom of the boys who played ball to bring their own bases, and at times four or five games may have been in progress at the same time in various parts of the field. There was no evidence tending to show that the city or the Commissioners of Fairmount Park had established this or any other diamond; but on the contrary it was testified that from time to time the park guards required the players to move their game farther away from the street.

With these facts in evidence, the trial judge instructed the jury, in substance, that as the city owns Fairmount Park just as one of its members might own a lot in the city, it had the same duties and was subject to the same responsibilities and liabilities as an individual property owner; and that such an owner of land abutting on a highway, who has control of his premises and who authorizes, or permits, or negligently fails to prevent, a use of his land which injures any person lawfully using the highway is liable for such injury. He then submitted to the jury, under adequate and detailed instructions, the question whether the city *266 had failed to perform its duty as he had defined it. One •paragraph of the charge reads:

“Nobody denies the right of the city to have ball playing in Fairmount Park; the question is, allowing the game to be at that particular point with that pathway there, used to the extent it was and with the catcher in the position in which he usually was and that going on there for a long period of time, was it negligence on the part of the City of Philadelphia either in not putting the boys in another place, or, if they did not want to do that, at least in not seeing to it that some guard or protection was put up so that passersby would not likely be injured.”

A majority of the members of this court are of opinion that this case was not tried upon a sound legal theory. .

The contentions of the city may be thus stated: While not conceding there was sufficient evidence of negligence to take the case to the jury, its counsel argue: First, the city has no control over Fairmount Park and therefore is not responsible for any negligence which the evidence may have disclosed; second, even if it has control, the utmost shown by the evidence was the neglect and failure of the park guards to police this section of the park in a proper manner.

1. The first contention of the city cannot be sustained. It holds title to the land in the park, which is maintained and managed for the benefit of its citizens by Commissioners appointed by the Board of Judges. The statutes creating the park and providing for its control and management have been considered and fully interpreted in previous cases. See Philadelphia v. McManes et al., 175 Pa. 28, 84 A. 331, (relating to the granting of a franchise for a street railway); Ankenbrand v. Philadelphia, 52 Pa. Superior Ct. 581, (liability for injuries received through falling into a hole in *267 a park footwalk); and Wood v. Philadelphia, 59 Pa. Superior Ct. 90, (appointment of park guards).

It is true, as these cases point out, that the commissioners have full and exclusive jurisdiction over the management of the park; but this fact has never been held to insulate the city from liability for actionable negligence in that management. The commissioners have no power to levy taxes; the funds for the administration of the park must be appropriated by the city; the commissioners may be independent of the city, but they are not alien to it.

In the Ankenbrand case, supra, this court said: “The Commissioners of Fairmount Park do not constitute a corporate body with capacity to sue and be sued as such, and they are not officers of a corporation or quasi-corporation separate and distinct from the city.”

Another argument advanced is that the city should not be held liable for any negligence upon the part of park employees or appointees because it does not employ or appoint them. As stated in the Ankenbrand case, the method of appointment of the servants of a municipality is a matter solely for determination by the legislature; that branch of the government may direct that they be elected by the people, appointed by councils, or chosen in some other way.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bagley v. Philadelphia
25 A.2d 579 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Stevens Et Ux. v. Pittsburgh
194 A. 563 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Paraska v. Scranton
184 A. 276 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 A. 446, 121 Pa. Super. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honaman-v-philadelphia-pasuperct-1935.