Irwin Savings & Trust Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad

37 A.2d 432, 349 Pa. 278
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 10, 1944
DocketAppeals, 114-118
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 432 (Irwin Savings & Trust Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin Savings & Trust Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 37 A.2d 432, 349 Pa. 278 (Pa. 1944).

Opinions

Opinion oe

Mr. Justice Drew,

This case arose out of the facts of a particularly sad and distressing accident. It is a combined action of a *280 personal representative, Irwin Savings & Trust Company, brought to recover damages for the estates of four minor children of one family, ranging in age from about three to eight years, and also damages for their parents, because of the drowning of the children in a pool of water partly upon property of defendant and partly upon property of an adjacent owner, which had been formed by the diversion of the waters of a small stream by the failure of defendant to keep open a culvert beneath its track. ■

'At the trial, binding instructions for defendant having been refused, the case was submitted to the jury and verdicts were returned for each of the minor’s estates and for the parents. Upon refusal of motions for judgment n. o. v. and a new trial and the entry of judgments on the- verdicts, defendant took these appeals.

In considering the motions for judgment n. o. v. we will view the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, as we are required to do while considering a motion of this kind: Anstine v. Penna. R. R. Co., 342 Pa. 423, 20 A. 2d 774.

The scene of this tragic accident was a very rural section of Little Sewickley Creek Valley in Westmoreland County. About 1890 defendant made a survey there for a single track branch line, and shortly thereafter the line was built; an embankment about 18 feet in height was filled in between low ground or marsh land and Little Sewickley Creek. A three-foot stone and pipe culvert was placed to carry a small sulphur stream under the track, and it was located about 400 feet from the lower end of the marsh. For many years this low ground was swampy with water in varying amounts, more in winter than in summer, but never amounting to much. About two years before this accident, the culvert became blocked by debris which had flowed into it, and the water which should have passed through it was diverted and flowed back over the low ground or marsh and formed a pool about 250 feet in length, about *281 90 feet across at its widest point, with a depth of 10 to 12 feet toward the center. This pool was plainly visible from the railroad track and defendant’s foreman, whose duty it was to keep the culvert open, passed this place many times in the two years before the accident but did nothing to remedy the condition. There is no doubt defendant knew, or should have known that the culvert was closed for a long period of time, and that the water that should have gone through it had formed a large' pool on its land and that of an adjacent owner. That defendant was negligent in not opening the culvert and releasing the water, is conceded. That such could be done and at-small cost is admitted.

The Rustro family lived on a farm south of the valley, distant about 500 feet from the pool. There are a few other houses close by, one on adjacent property occupied by Mike Montecupo. There was testimony that a number of children played around the pool in the summer and on the ice in the winter.

On Sunday, March 23, 19ál, the Rustro children were invited to play on the Montecupo property and they were there with John Montecupo, the neighbor’s boy, nine years of age, when they decided to go to the pond. His testimony follows: “Q. What did the children do? A. Went straight on the ice. Q. What were they doing? A. There was a kite up a tree with a string coming, there was a string— Q. Where was the string? A. The string was on the pond. Q. What did they do? A. Yunko took hold of the string. Q. Yunko, that is Johnny, Jr.? A. Yes. Q. Then what happened? A. Then the string broke, then they was walking up around like by the string and Mary fell in. Q. Where did Mary fall in? A. About almost in the middle. Q. Was there ice on there at that time? A. Yes. Q. Then what happened to Mary? A. Then Yunko wanted to go after her, he went; Peter wanted to go after him, he went. Anna fell in — I mean I called her. She said she was going to jump too so she went. Q. You called her? *282 A. Yes. Q. Why did you call her? A. I didn’t want her to go in. Q. What did she do? A. She jumped in. Q. Did they come up again? A. No. Q. Then what did you do? A. I went up to my dad.” The mother testified: “Q. On this Sunday afternoon did you know that the children were playing with a kite? A. Well Mary, she was home, she had a kite at home. Q. She did have a kite at home? A. Mary had a kite but Junior didn’t have any and he was trying to make one. I was in bed, I seen him through the window, he had a butcher knife and he was trying to make one but he couldn’t make it.”

When the accident was reported help was summoned and the bodies of the children were removed from the water at a point where the depth was ten or twelve feet. It was testified that the string of the kite was fastened “tight on the hand” of two of the children.

The children were not trespassers, they had a right to be on the Montecupo property, having been invited there by the tenant. But owner and tenant testified they had not given defendant any permission to place the pool on their land, and it must be conceded that defendant was a trespasser in so doing. This case must not be confused with those where the injured person is a trespasser on property of another who causes the injury. But even if the children were trespassers, “The defense of no liability for injury to a trespasser is personal to the owner of the premises trespassed upon; it does not inure to the benefit of strangers to the title, adjoining owners, or other trespassers”: Fitzpatrick v. Penfield, 267 Pa. 564, 574, 109 A. 653.

The so-called “playground” or “attractive nuisance” cases likewise have no application here. This is obvious because the children were not upon defendant’s premises. In the former the use of private grounds by trespassing children must be such as to cause the place in the immediate vicinity to be generally known as a recreation center: Prokop v. Becker, 345 Pa. 607, 29 A. 2d 23. We do not have anything of that kind here. To consti *283 tute the latter, the owner must maintain on his premises an object or instrumentality, by which if left unguarded a child with his natural curiosity to investigate may by playing with it, setting it in motion, or running against it sustain an accident: Pietros v. Hecla C. & C. Co., 118 Pa. Superior Ct. 453, 180 A. 119. We have nothing of the kind here because a pool or pond is not an attractive nuisance where there is no unusual danger: Murdock v. Pa. Railroad Co., 150 Pa. Superior Ct. 156, 27 A. 2d 405; 20 R. C. L., Negligence §85, p. 96; 36 A. L. R. 34.

It is strongly urged the case should not have been submitted to the jury. The record shows that there is not a particle of conflict in the evidence and therefore we are bound to conclude that the question of proximate cause was for the court. Where it is alleged that an injury arose from negligence the question of the proximate cause is to be decided by the jury upon all the facts of the case, but where the facts are undisputed, and the intervening agency is manifest, it is not error for the court to withhold the evidence from the jury: Hoag v.

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37 A.2d 432, 349 Pa. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-savings-trust-co-v-pennsylvania-railroad-pa-1944.