Lorenzo v. Wirth

49 N.E. 1010, 170 Mass. 596, 1898 Mass. LEXIS 287
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 9, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 49 N.E. 1010 (Lorenzo v. Wirth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorenzo v. Wirth, 49 N.E. 1010, 170 Mass. 596, 1898 Mass. LEXIS 287 (Mass. 1898).

Opinion

Holmes, J.

This is an action for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff in consequence of her stepping into an open coal hole. The coal hole was situated about eighteen inches in front of a house held by the defendant under a lease, and upon land, embraced in the lease. The house was set back from the street,, and the coal hole was two feet or more outside the street line. But the paving over the space between the street line and the house was continuous with that of the street, and there was nothing in the usual conditions to give notice that it was not part of the street except the way in which it generally was used by tenants for the deposit of barrels, etc., and the fact that the steps of the house next to it on the side from which the plaintiff was coming came out to the line of the street.

At the time of the accident, a coal wagon was backed up to the side wall in front of the premises, and coal, which had been ordered by the defendant, was being delivered from it by the servants of a coal dealer. One of these had uncovered the coal hole, and was shovelling the last of the coal out of the wagon upon the sidewalk. The other stood by the hole, doing such work as was necessary to help the coal pour down the hole. The coal covered the whole sidewalk from the wagon to near the house. The plaintiff, a Spanish woman, who according to her own testimony never had seen coal put through a coal hole before, stepped upon the steps of the next building above mentioned, thence stepped upon the coal, and then with her other leg went into the coal hole, which was thirty inches from the corner of the steps. The judge was asked to direct a verdict for the defendant, which he refused to do, and the defendant excepted.

[600]*600The question in its common form is whether these facts show any evidence of negligence proper to be left to the jury. But it will be seen that it is not a question of evidence in the ordinary sense. It is not whether there is anything tending to prove a disputed fact. The acts and omissions of the defendant as to the plaintiff are fully known and undisputed. The question is whether those acts and omissions made the defendant liable for the plaintiff’s hurt, — in the common language of the law, whether they constituted a breach of duty to the plaintiff. It will be observed, further, that the facts on which the question arises are quite simple, and are likely to be repeated with slight variations as long as coal holes exist; that they are all matters of eyesight, capable of being photographed; and that theory must recognize that at some point the visible situation would be such as to warrant the defendant in assuming that the public were sufficiently warned, or, in other words, that the defendant would have done her whole duty. Chenery v. Fitchburg Railroad, 160 Mass. 211, 214. It is true that blind men and foreigners unused to our ways have a right to walk in the streets, and this fact must be taken into consideration in drawing the line of the defendant’s duty; but the line when drawn is a physical line, so to speak, — it is a visible situation in which all the arrangements or precautions which the law requires of a defendant are there, upon the ground.

In simple cases of this sort courts' have felt able to determine what in every case however complex, defendants are bound at their peril to know, and are presumed to know, namely, whether the given situation is on one or the other side of the line. The examples are numerous, and we take the first that come to our hand. Barron v. Eldredge, 100 Mass. 455, 460, 461. Pinney v. Hall, 156 Mass. 225. Crafter v. Metropolitan Railway, L. R. 1 C. P. 300. We think that the case at bar is not beyond our competence to decide. The greatest danger in attempting to do so is that of being misled by ready made generalizations, and of thinking only in phrases to which as lawyers the judges have become accustomed, instead of looking straight at things and regarding the facts in all their concreteness as a jury would do. Too broadly generalized conceptions are a constant source of fallacy, Thus it is easy to say that the continuity of the sidewalk [601]*601was an invitation, and then to discuss in universals the duty of one who invites the public upon his land. But, invitation or no, the invitation is not the same, and the responsibility is not the same, when the place is seemingly in the middle of a clear highway, and looks safe and ready for travel to one who is walking straight along the open road, that it is where the place is in a snug corner and is capable of being reached only by going over steps which manifestly are not a part of the highway, and then by stepping into a pile of coal which surrounds the spot in question. Without considering whether under such, circumstances the defendant would be freed from all duty in respect of the temporary dangers created by the coal dealer while he was doing his work, (Clapp v. Kemp, 122 Mass. 481,) it is the opinion of a majority of the court that she was not called on to stand guard and to tell the public that they must not understand the continuity of the pavement under the coal, if they happened to know of it, as a present assurance that they might step blindly into the coal, and as a warranty that there was no hole in the place where the coal was pouring down. A heap of coal on a sidewalk in Boston is an indication according to common experience that there very possibly may be a coal hole to receive it. But without saying that it always is a sufficient warning to look out for one, we are of opinion that, as against a person coming from where the plaintiff came from, with a coal hole situated as this was, the coal in the condition shown, and the business of delivery then going on, in the absence of men with baskets or other indication of a different means of making the delivery, the defendant cannot be said to have been wanting in due care.

Exceptions sustained.

Knowlton, J.

I am unable to agree to the opinion of the majority in this case. The building occupied by the defendant, and the adjoining buildings for a considerable distance towards the west, stood back from the line of the street about three feet and eight inches. The buildings in the other direction, with their projections, came out to the line of the street. The space in front of the defendant’s building and of the adjoining buildings towards the west was paved with the same kind of material, and on the same level all the way from the buildings to the curb[602]*602stone, and was used as a sidewalk. The walk was not very wide, and there was nothing to mark the line of the street. In Holmes v. Drew, 151 Mass. 578, 580, is this language: “ The jury might have inferred from the facts stated that the defendant laid out and paved the sidewalk on her own land in order that it should be used by the public as the sidewalk of the street, and allowed it to remain apparently the part of the street that was intended to be used by foot passengers. This would amount to an invitation to the public to enter upon and use as a public sidewalk the land so prepared, and the plaintiff so using it would have gone upon the defendant’s land by her implied invitation, and she would owe to him the duty not to expose him to a dangerous condition of the walk which reasonable care on her part would have prevented.” In Plummer v. Dill, 156 Mass. 426, 430, the court says, referring to cases of this kind, they “ stand on a ground peculiar to themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E. 1010, 170 Mass. 596, 1898 Mass. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorenzo-v-wirth-mass-1898.