Leonard v. Manchester

70 A.2d 915, 96 N.H. 115, 1950 N.H. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 3, 1950
Docket3879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 A.2d 915 (Leonard v. Manchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. Manchester, 70 A.2d 915, 96 N.H. 115, 1950 N.H. LEXIS 8 (N.H. 1950).

Opinion

Lampron, J.

The defendant’s motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict were properly denied and its exceptions thereto are overruled. The question raised by these exceptions is “whether on the evidence any verdict could be found for the plaintiff.” Chabot v. Company, 79 N. H. 230, 231. In passing upon these motions “the Court was obliged to consider the evidence for the plaintiff as true and to construe all the evidence most favorably to the plaintiff.” Shimkus v. Caesar, 95 N. H. 286, 287.

There was expert testimony on behalf of the plaintiff to the effect that this bridge was not suitably constructed for walking traffic, the defect therein being the running of the planking in a lengthwise direction which directly induces slipping when the surface becomes wet. On a level surface a wooden plank is 74% more resistent to slipping across the grain than it is lengthwise of the grain (coefficient of friction). A 7.9% sloping of the surface would greatly increase the liability to slip aside from the above coefficient of friction. And this tendency would further be greatly increased if the planks were wet with rain, snow or ice.

The plaintiff testified that she was walking on wooden planks of the bridge which were wet and slippery. Her foot slipped on the wet wood of the bridge, she fell and received the injuries complained of.

Were these injuries which the plaintiff received in her fall incurred by reason of a defect, insufficiency, or want of repair in the structure (Bernier v. Whitefield, 80 N. H. 245, 246) of such bridge which rendered it unsuitable for travel thereon? Laws 1945, supra. There is no question that the roadway on which the plaintiff fell was part of the structure of this bridge. Wilson v. Barnstead, 74 N. H. 78. In view of the fact that the sidewalks on either side of the bridge had been impassable for quite some time prior to the day of the accident by reason of their not having been plowed and were still in that condition *118 on that day, the jury could properly find that the plaintiff was reasonably using the vehicular way to get across the bridge (Murphy v. Granz, 91 N. H. 244, 245), and that the defendant should have reasonably anticipated such a use being made. The test to be applied in determining the sufficiency of this bridge for this use of it by the plaintiff, and the numerous other persons so using it, is whether it was such a bridge as the ordinary man would have maintained at such a place. Hickey v. Berlin, 78 N. H. 69, 70; Chapman v. Lee, 80 N. H. 484, 486.

A slope of 7.9% in that bridge would not in and of itself render it insufficient. The fact alone that the planks were laid lengthwise instead of crosswise might not make it so either. Add thereto, however, the further evidence, that wooden planks laid lengthwise offer less resistance to slipping than planks laid crosswise, that this difference in liability to slip is increased when these planks are in a sloping surface, that wetness from ice, rain, snow, or other precipitation of moisture further accentuates this difference in resistance to slipping, the jury could then reasonably find that the maintenance by the defendant of a surface so laid on a bridge of this slope, charged, as it reasonably must be, with the knowledge that its surface would become wet, constituted a defect, insufficiency or want of repair which rendered this bridge unsuitable for travel thereon. Munroe v. Deer-field, 84 N. H. 144.

Could the jury further properly find that plaintiff’s accident was caused by this defect, insufficiency or want of repair? The defendant contends that the plaintiff’s fall resulted from her slipping on the freezing rain and snow which had coated the surface of the bridge so that the alleged defect was not the cause of the accident. Bernier v. Whitefield, supra. It further argues that plaintiff, because of a statement made in her deposition that it must have been snow on the bridge that caused her to slip, may be prevented, under the rule of Harlow v. Leclair, 82 N. H. 506, from having the jury find that her fall was on a Wet planking cleared of snow and ice. The defendant further contends that, even conceding that she may not be so prevented, the undisputed fact remains that the weather conditions were such as to make her contention that she fell on a wet plank instead of a plank coated by the freezing rain and snow incredible, as being testimony contrary to undisputable physical facts. Brown v. Mailhot, 89 N. H. 240.

The plaintiff testified at the trial that she slipped on the wet wood of the bridge. She was walking in a rut at the time. There was no *119 snow or ice in this rut because the automobiles going back and forth had worn the surface of the rut down to the wood. A fair appraisal of plaintiff’s entire testimony in deposition and at the trial leads to the conclusion that she is not asking the jury to find that she perjured herself when she urges a finding by them that she fell on the wet wood. Harlow v. Leclair, supra; Cote v. Stafford, 94 N. H. 251. Her contention that, in spite of some fall of freezing rain and snow at different intervals between midnight and the time of the accident and the below freezing temperature which prevailed during all that time, the rut was not coated with ice or snow because of the action of passing automobiles was not incredible as a matter of law as contrary to undisputable physical facts. O’Brien v. Public Service Company, 95 N. H. 79, 81.

The defendant argues, however, that even if it can be found that plaintiff fell as she contends she did, the wetness of the planks was the cause of the accident and the defendant having no control over this element cannot be held responsible for plaintiff’s injury. The answer to this contention is that the jury could find on the evidence that wetness was but one of the factors which brought about the accident and by itself was not the cause of plaintiff’s fall. The accident, they could find, resulted from the increased tendency to slip on the roadway of this bridge when wet from the elements caused by the fact that the defendant maintained it at a slope of 7.9% with wooden plankings laid lengthwise. Whether or not the way in which the planking was laid on this bridge was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries was a question of fact for the jury to determine. Prichard v. Boscawen, 78 N. H. 131, 133; Clark v. Hampton, 83 N. H. 524; Restatement, Torts, ss. 432 (2), 434.

We will next consider exceptions taken by the defendant to the admission of certain testimony on behalf of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
70 A.2d 915, 96 N.H. 115, 1950 N.H. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-manchester-nh-1950.