Husband v. Salt Lake City

69 P.2d 491, 92 Utah 449, 1937 Utah LEXIS 112
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1937
DocketNo. 5800.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 69 P.2d 491 (Husband v. Salt Lake City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Husband v. Salt Lake City, 69 P.2d 491, 92 Utah 449, 1937 Utah LEXIS 112 (Utah 1937).

Opinions

HANSON, Justice.

Plaintiff brought this action against Salt Lake City to recover for personal injuries sustained by him while he was in Pioneer Park, a park owned and managed by the city. The defendant filed a general demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint. The lower court sustained the demurrer and, upon plaintiff failing to further plead, dismissed the complaint. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment of dismissal and assigns as error the sustaining of said demurrer and the dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint. Pertinent to the questions before us, the complaint alleges:

*451 “IV. That defendant owns, operates, manages and controls a certain park in said city situated between Third and Fourth South and Second and Third West Streets, known as Pioneer Park and owns, operates, manages and controls in said park a public swimming pool, and that both said swimming pool and said park are for the use of the inhabitants of said city.
“V. That children of tender years and of all ages living in the neighborhood of said Pioneer Park and elsewhere in said city have for many years in large numbers frequented and used said park as a playground, and did so frequent and use said park in the month of July, 1933, and also for many years have swam in the swimming pool in said park and did so use said swimming pool in July, 1933, all at the invitation of the defendant to so frequent and use said park and swimming pool, and that defendant at all times herein mentioned provided and maintained said park and swimming pool for the use and benefit of such children, and that in so using the said swimming pool the children were accustomed to play around the edges of the swimming pool in their bathing suits, and also at other places, and on the pedestrian pathways in said park.
“VI. That there are now and at all times herein mentioned were pedestrian pathways in said park leading to and around and adjacent to said swimming pool, and that said pedestrian pathways were not and are not for the use or convenience of vehicles, and particularly of trucks and other motor vehicles, and that the children frequenting and using said park and swimming pool, particularly in the mornings, did and would play in great numbers, run, chase each other and dash heedlessly to and fro along, over and across said pedestrian pathways and around said swimming pool and in said park, so that said pathways would be and were crowded, and particularly on the 8th day of July, 1933, were crowded with children thus scampering, running and playing and jostling each other to and fro as aforesaid.
“VII. That the defendant knew of the custom and habit of said children in playing, frequenting, and using said park, pathways and swimming pool as aforesaid, and regardless of this knowledge the defendant on many occasions, and particularly on or about the 8th day of July, 1933, operated a huge sprinkling wagon or truck without guards or attendants to keep said children away from it, over and along said pedestrian pathways in said park and in the vicinity of said swimming pool, and that said truck had water sprays located in the rear thereof so that water could be and was sprayed from said truck to settle dust and for other purposes desired by the defendant, and that defendant knew that said truck, and particularly the sprays of water sprinkled therefrom, would and did attract the children in said park and around said swimming pool, and that said children did and would *452 run in and around said spray and in and around and in front of and •along the side of said truck; that in operating said truck over and along said pedestrian pathways and in said park, and in spraying and sprinkling with said truck there was great and grave and imminent danger to the lives and safety of said children, and operating said truck in and among said children while the children were at play and pushing and jostling each other and running to and fro was a great menace to the lives and safety of said children; that said children played heedlessly and without appreciation of the danger to themselves in running in and around and in front of and along the side of said truck, and in pushing and jostling each other as said truck proceeded along said pathway, all of which was known or should have been known to defendant; that said pathways were not provided for the use of said truck, and that said truck on or about the 8th day of July, 1933, and on similar prior occasions when defendant had operated said truck or another similar truck in the same way and at the same place, was a constant source of danger to the lives and safety of the children in said park as aforesaid, and that the operating of said truck in the manner aforesaid and at said times and places, and by reason of the presence of said children, and by reason of the water spraying from said truck and attracting said children as aforesaid, at all times, and particularly on the 8th day of July, 1933, then and there constituted a dangerous menace to the safety and welfare of said children, and was a nuisance, and that such nuisance was created by the defendant.
“VIII. That notwithstanding the danger and menace to the lives and safety of said children as aforesaid, and or about the 8th day of July, 1933, the defendant operated and caused to be propelled said sprinkling truck in said park and along the pedestrian pathways in the vicinity of said swimming pool, with the sprays of water sprinkling therefrom in and among said children who were then and there playing as aforesaid in great numbers, and that at said time and place the plaintiff, who was then and there a minor aged ten, unable to exercise the care and discretion of an adult, was proceeding towards the swimming pool in said park, and that as the said truck was operated as aforesaid the children were running and pushing and jostling and crowding each other around said truck and in front of and along the side thereof, and in and through said water spray, making loud outcries and noises, and that the driver of said truck nevertheless proceeded heedlessly to drive in and among said children, and that said children in running and pushing and jostling each other as aforesaid forced the plaintiff into the wheel of said truck so that his right leg was caught between the left wheel and the spring of said truck; that the driver of said truck was not watching the children or this plaintiff, or watching the progress of said truck as it proceeded in and *453 among said children, and that when plaintiff’s leg was caught as aforesaid the children yelled and cried out to the driver of said truck to stop, and that he proceeded without heeding said warning and paid no attention to said outcries.
“IX. That by reason of the creation and maintenance of said nuisance by the defendant as aforesaid, and that by reason of the defendant’s negligence and carelessness as aforesaid plaintiff’s right leg was severely injured, and that the calf thereof was practically torn away from the leg, and he was forced to have hospital care and treatment for many weeks; that he suffered great pain and has a permanent and unsightly scar on his right leg which will be there the remainder of his life; that in healing said wound formed severe scar tissue and plaintiff’s leg is permanently disfigured, all to his injury and damage in the sum of Fifteen Hundred ($1500.00) Dollars.
“X.

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Bluebook (online)
69 P.2d 491, 92 Utah 449, 1937 Utah LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/husband-v-salt-lake-city-utah-1937.