Long v. Sweeten

90 A. 782, 123 Md. 88, 1914 Md. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 A. 782 (Long v. Sweeten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Sweeten, 90 A. 782, 123 Md. 88, 1914 Md. LEXIS 107 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Tho appellant sued the appellees for injuries to his horse which resulted in its death, caused by the ground on Frederick street, between Water and Lombard streets in the City *90 of Baltimore, giving way and the horse sinking into a hole. It is alleged in the na/rr. that the “ground giving way in said street, and permitting said horse to sink in said hole, and receive said injuries, was caused hy the improper and negligent filling in of a di-teh by the said Frank B. Sweeten, which ditch was dug by the said Frank B. Sweeten for and at the instigation of the said Mayor and Oity Council of Baltimore. And the plaintiff further avers that the said injuries to said horse were due entirely to the negligence and want of care on the part of the defendants, their agents and servants, in the premises,, in not properly and carefully filling in said ditch,” etc.

Two exceptions were taken to the rulings on evidence offered, and a third to the rulings on the prayers. We will first consider the latter. Two prayers were granted at the instance of the Mayor and Oity Council of Baltimore, and one at the instance of the defendant Sweeten. The first instructed the jury that there was no evidence legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover against the Mayor 'and Oity Council; the second was similar to the first, excepting it referred to the pleadings; and the third was similar to the second, excepting it referred to defendant Sweeten. A prayer offered by the plaintiff was rejected, but the principal question for our consideration is whether there was legally sufficient evidence, under the pleadings, to entitle the plaintiff to recover against either defendant.

Frank B. Sweeten, trading as B. F. Sweeten & Son, built, a sewer on Frederick street, under a contract with the City. The main line of that sewer from Lombard to Water street, was laid two feet west of the west curb line of Frederick street. There is a lateral line which runs in the alley north of Lombard street, east from the main line on Frederick street. That lateral line is four feet north of the south building line of the alley, which is between thirteen and fourteen feet wide, and starts two feet east of the.west curb line of Frederick street, and runs across Frederick street up the alley. It was begun on September 4th, and was completed. *91 on the 20th of September, 1912, being paved over to the building line of the alley up to the east building line of Frederick street.

The plaintiff was employed by the George Long Contracting Company, which paved Frederick street from Pratt to Lexington street, and the plaintiff owned the horse which died from the injuries received. On December 19th, 1912, his team came up Frederick street with a load of gravel. His company had taken up the cobble stones and had finished the grading, ready to put on the concrete for the pavement. At the place where the accident occurred about five inches of dirt bad been taken off and the cobblestones were about five inches in depth. The plaintiff, who was in charge of the work being done by his company, testified: “As the horses passed me on the east side of Frederick street, about six feet from the curb, at the alley back of Guth’s chocolate place, then the horse went down with his left hind leg 'and tried to jump out hut fell hack. There was a piece of lagging sticking np about five or six inches above the dirt. That they got the horse out of the hole, apparently unhurt,” hut subsequently it was found to be injured and died. He said that before the horse went in the hole the appearance of the ground was all right — that the hole was about three and a half feet deep. “There was not anything but a shell hole in the dirt. There was no dirt in there. The horse did not sink in any dirt, as there was no dirt there. It was a shell about that large, and all under that was hollow. The horse went down until he could not get any further. His stomach is what held him up. That he saw lagging in the hole. That lagging are the planks that they.drive down in a ditch when men are working in there to keep the side of the ditch from falling on them. The lagging did not show’ before the accident. That he saw two pieces running north and south. That the horse when he fell struck his stomach on one of the pieces of lagging. That he cut no lagging off at this particular place.”

*92 The appellant in his brief claims the right to recover on one of the two grounds mentioned — either that the work was negligently done by Sweeten in behalf of the city, or if that be not established, that the city is liable for a violation of its duty to keep the streets in good repair and reasonably safe for travel. There are several difficulties in the way of his recovery on the second ground. It will be remembered that two of the prayers expressly referred to the pleadings, and there is no allegation in the narr. that the city failed to perform its duty to keep this street in repair. Moreover, there is no evidence that would sustain the case on that theory. The plaintiff and his driver proved that there was no indication of anything wrong with this street, but on the contrary, as stated by the plaintiff, “the appearance of the ground before the horse went in was all right,” and as the driver said, “The street looked solid to him.” There was no attempt to prove notice to the city that there was any defect in the street, and as shown by the plaintiff’s evidence there was nothing to attract the attention of the officers of the city to it. In addition to that the suit was against the city and Sweeten jointly, and even if the city had been liable on proper allegations and proof on the ground just referred to, of course Sweeten would not have been liable.

’ So we are brought to the question of liability on the ground alleged in the narr., as shown above. The theory upon which the prayers of the appelllees were granted seems to have been that, “There is no evidence of a ditch or of any filling in, negligent or otherwise,” and they rely upon the testimony of Mr. Capíes, who was an Inspector of the Sewerage Commission in the laying of this sewer, as the only peiaoii who testified and who was present when the city work was being done by Sweeten. It is true that Mr. Oaples testified that they tunnelled for this lateral line on account of obstructions, that the top of the tunnel was about seven and a half feet below the surface of the street, and “We did not disturb anything above the roof of the tunnel,” and also said: “When the main *93 line was laid there- was another man there who- was there all the time. I went there as often as I could, hut, after the main line was finished, I went there personally and laid all lines that went across Frederick street.” His testimony undoubtedly tended to show that there was no ditch or trench made on or near the surface where the injury took place, but we cannot say as a matter of law that there was no legally sufficient evidence to the contrary.

There was, according to the uncontradicted evidence a hole in the street into which the horse’s leg sank, and there was lagging there, which it is claimed caused the injury to the horse. There was also undoubtedly some evidence that there was a ditch or. trench where the hole was.

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Bluebook (online)
90 A. 782, 123 Md. 88, 1914 Md. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-sweeten-md-1914.