Jefferson Dry Goods Co. v. Dale

78 S.W.2d 305, 257 Ky. 501, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 564
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 23, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 78 S.W.2d 305 (Jefferson Dry Goods Co. v. Dale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson Dry Goods Co. v. Dale, 78 S.W.2d 305, 257 Ky. 501, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 564 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

At about 7:30 a. m., on March 20, 1933, the appellee and plaintiff below, H. R. Dale, while half running in trying to get to and board a street car on Fourth street in the city of Louisville, fell on the north sidewalk of Jefferson street not far from where it intersects Fourth street, from which he sustaned injuries, to recover damages for which he filed this action against, the abutting lessee, the appellant and defendant below, Jefferson Drjr Goods Company. In his petition he averred that defendant maintained at the place where he fell, for its use and benefit, an opening into a cellar under the building occupied by it, and which was used in connection with the operation of its business; that the opening was covered with two doors coming flush with the pavement of the street when they were closed, and each of them when first installed was provided with a handle loosely working in sockets, and which would fall into provided cavities so as to be upon a level with or below the surface of the walk when not being used for lifting the doors, but that some six weeks before the accident one of the handles became broken, and defendant improvised a wire one as a substitute therefor, and that it had negligently failed to maintain the latter in a reasonably safe condition for pedestrian travelers, and that at the time the wire handle was projecting above the street into which he hung his right foot, causing him to fall and sustain the injuries complained of.

The answer denied the material averments of the petition, except that it admitted the improvised handle, *503 but insisted that it was as safe because of tbe manner of its adjustment, as was tbe original one constructed by the manufacturers of tbe door. Tbe answer also contained a ple'a of contributory negligence, wbicb was denied, and upon trial there was tbe requisite majority verdict in favor of plaintiff for tbe sum of $1,500, upon which tbe court rendered judgment against defendant, and its motion for a new trial having been overruled, it prosecutes this appeal, complaining of a number of errors, tbe material ones of wbicb will be disposed of as. tbe opinion proceeds.

It is first insisted that defendant was entitled to a peremptory instruction in its favor, but wbicb we conclude tbe court properly overruled. That contention is based upon what counsel urges as tbe correct principle of law governing tbe rights of defendant in the premises, and wbicb is that, before liability would attach to it, under tbe circumstances, it should have bad notice of tbe complained of defect, or that tbe latter should have existed for such a length of time as that ordinary diligence on tbe part of defendant would have discovered it. In other words, it is insisted that defendant is not amenable unless it bad actual or constructive knowledge of tbe defect and then failed to correct it within a reasonable time thereafter; tbe latter knowledge being that wbicb would be gained by tbe exercise of ordinary care to discover tbe fact. Tbe contention is no more nor less than tbe insistence that the same principle should govern this case as governs tbe liability of a municipality in maintaining its public ways reasonably safe for travel by those entitled to use them for that purpose. But, if that same measure of duty should be accepted by us as tbe governing one in this case, it would not then necessarily follow, under tbe facts proved and admitted, that defendant was entitled to tbe instruction contended for, as we will now proceed to point out.

In considering this case, we have read many of our opinions and those of other courts, as well as the statements of text-writers treating tbe subject, and from them we deduce tbe conclusions stated below as embodying tbe settled rules governing tbe duty of those similarly situated to that of .defendant in this case, and wbicb are approved and applied by a great majority of courts. They are: (a) When tbe abutting owner or *504 his occupying lessee maintains on the sidewalk adjacent to the occupied building a contrivance for his use and benefit, and for which he has obtained a license from the city, either express or implied, and it is constructed in a reasonably safe manner and after a reasonably safe plan so as not to be an obstruction on the sidewalk when the contrivance is not in use (during which latter time it should be guarded and protected), he is charged with the duty to exercise ordinary care to maintain it in such reasonably safe condition, and which requires that he should have notice of the defect, either actual or constructive, and a reasonable time thereafter in which to repair it; but (b) when the dangerous contrivance after construction, or placement, is itself an obstruction or inherently dangerous to those having the right to use the way, it instantly becomes a public nuisance, and the one who created it is liable at all events to one who is injured and damaged by reason thereof when himself in the exercise of ordinary care. In that case the tort-feasor is entitled to no notice of the condition which his act has produced on the public way, because, having been constructed by him, or at his instance, in a manner to be inherently dangerous, he possessed knowledge of its character from the beginning. Under rule (a), if the injury here complained of had been produced because of some condition of nonrepair or some displacement of parts of the contrivance, defendant would be entitled to notice thereof either actual or constructive, as we have indicated, before liability would attach to it.

Midway between those rules, and composed of some of the elements of both, a third one is evolved, and Which is (c) that, although the maintained contrivance is so constructed as to be embraced by rule (a), yet if it, because of wear or other causes, becomes defective, its maintainer is required to repair it in a manner and fashion so as to preserve its original safety, and, if he should fail in that duty and substitute a dangerous device plan or method for the defective part or parts, he thereby becomes burdened with a more vigilant inspection in fulfilling his duty of exercising ordinary care, since the vigilance imposed by that phrase (ordinary care) corresponds with the dangers to be guarded against, including the probabilities and possibilities of the'case. If the substituted contrivance is itself inherently dangerous, the duties imposed under rule (b), supra, become 'immediately effective. However, if the *505 substituted part is not, as constructed, inherently dangerous, but is only more liable to become so than was true of the original part so substituted, then the maintainer is called upon to exercise increased vigilance and inspection corresponding with such increased danger.

Authorities substantiating such rules are: Annotations in 62 A. L. R. beginning on page 1067, and following the case of Callaway v. Newman Mercantile Co. reported on page 1056 of that volume, and also in 321 Mo. 766, 12 S. W. (2d) 491, being one from the Missouri Supreme Court; 13 R. C. L. pp. 322, 403, 438, and 439; Elliott on Roads and Streets, vol. 2, secs. 899 and 903; Bosler Hotel Co. v. Speed, 167 Ky. 800, 181 S. W. 645; J. E. M. Milling Co. v. Gaines, 231 Ky. 779, 22 S. W. (2d) 274; Merchants’ Ice & Coal Storage Co. v. Bargholt, 129 Ky. 60, 110 S. W. 364, 16 Ann. Cas. 965; Hippodrome Amusement Co. v. Carius, 175 Ky. 783, 195 S. W. 113, L. R. A.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W.2d 305, 257 Ky. 501, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-dry-goods-co-v-dale-kyctapphigh-1934.