Malone Et Ux. v. Union Paving Co.

159 A. 21, 306 Pa. 111, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 409
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 30, 1931
DocketAppeals, 307 and 308
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 159 A. 21 (Malone Et Ux. v. Union Paving Co.) 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
Malone Et Ux. v. Union Paving Co., 159 A. 21, 306 Pa. 111, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 409 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

This is a very unsatisfactory record. Plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, sued the Union Paving Company and the City of Philadelphia, to recover damages for injuries the wife sustained by reason of the alleged defective condition of a temporary foot crossing over the cart-way of one of the city’s streets. The city, alleging that the crossing had been constructed by or for the Philadelphia Bapid Transit Company, caused a scire facias to he issued against it, as an additional defendant, in the way provided by the Act of April 10, 1929, P. L. 479. The defendants and additional defendant each denied that the crossing was dangerous; the paving company and the transit company each denied that it did the work at the crossing; and the city denied that it was liable even if the crossing had been defectively constructed and the wife injured by reason thereof.

The verdict was: “Verdict against the City of Philadelphia with recovery from the Philadelphia Bapid Transit Company: $1,641 for Mr. Malone. Verdict for $3,000 for Mrs. Malone [hereinafter called the plaintiff] against the City of Philadelphia with recovery against the Philadelphia Bapid* Transit Company.” This verdict, as respects the “recovery against the Philadelphia Bapid Transit Company,” was, upon petition, properly moulded so as to read: “Verdict for the City of Philadelphia, defendant, against the Philadelphia Bapid Transit Company, additional defendant, for the sum of $4,641.” There was no verdict rendered either for or against the Union Paving Company, and it sought, by petition, to have added to the verdict the words: “Verdict for the Union Paving Company.” The court below has not acted upon this petition. If both the transit *116 company and the paving company are and continue to be financially responsible, it is a matter of little moment to the city which is held primarily liable, since the municipality is, at most, only secondarily liable in either event (Brobston v. Darby Boro., 290 Pa. 331), and the court will so control proceedings on the judgment as to enforce the respective rights of the parties inter se: Goldman v. Mitchell-Fletcher Co., 292 Pa. 354.

Plaintiff’s story of the accident, as told by herself, is that, while walking along Columbia Avenue, in broad daylight, on a clear day, she started to cross the cartway of 11th Street at the usual crossing for pedestrians. In the middle of the street at that point, was a trolley track operated by the transit company, the additional defendant. She saw that the street between the rails of the track had been excavated, and at the foot crossing had been filled in by railroad ties, running parallel with the rails. She says: “I went across to the track, and as I did I noticed that it looked all right to me to tramp on, or I would never have crossed, because I want to be sure of my footing. Then I stepped on the first tie, and as I stepped over on the other tie, the tie tilted......and I was thrown forward on my face,” thus receiving the injuries of which she complains.

There is no evidence that the city constructed the temporary crossing or had actual notice of its defective condition, if it was defective. The municipality was not required to assume that a defect existed, or “to seek for defects...... The law only requires that it shall be vigilant to observe them when they become observable to an officer exercising reasonable supervision”: Lohr v. Phillipsburg Boro., 156 Pa. 246, 249. That it was not observable in the instant case is evident from the fact that the plaintiff herself did not see it, though she says she carefully looked. If it was observable, and she chose to proceed notwithstanding, she was guilty of contributory negligence and cannot recover. If it was not observable to her, its condition was not such as to charge *117 the city with constructive notice, and hence no recovery could be had against it on that ground: Landis v. Phila., 295 Pa. 227. Moreover, if the city is to be held liable because of constructive notice of the defect, it is necessary to have proof that this had existed for a sufficient length of time to affect it with such notice.

Recognizing this situation, the trial judge charged the jury as follows: “if there is a defect in a highway,...... before there can be a liability on the part of the city ......the defect must have existed......a sufficient length of time to have given notice to the city of its existence. There is no evidence in the case that if there was a defect in this crossing it had existed any length of time prior to August 18, 1927, [the date of the accident] ......I repeat: the plaintiff, on whom the burden of proof rests to prove notice, has failed to offer any evidence to show the length of time, if there was a defective condition, that it had existed prior to the accident, in order to bring notice home to the city.” As the alleged defect was a hidden one, the statement that the evidence was not sufficient to charge the city with constructive notice was clearly correct, and, there having been neither averment nor proof of actual notice, there should, of course, if the case is to be viewed from the standpoint of constructive notice alone, have been an instructed verdict in the city’s favor. But instead of so charging the jury, the trial judge refused the city’s point for binding instructions, and the jury rendered a verdict against it, on which the court in banc entered the judgment which is the subject of this appeal.

Plaintiff avers, however, that the evidence discloses another reason why the verdict against the city should be sustained, viz., that in the contract between the paving company and the city, in relation to the paving of 11th Street, it was expressly provided that the paving company should keep the crossings open for public travel, and that this makes the city liable for any injury resulting from the negligence of the paving com *118 pany in constructing and maintaining such crossings. For this contention plaintiff relies on Norbeck v. Phila., 224 Pa. 30; Reichard v. Bangor Boro., 286 Pa. 25, and Scott v. Erie City, 297 Pa. 344. The present case was not submitted to the jury from this standpoint, however, and hence their verdict does not establish anything in regard to it. Moreover, there is at least one important distinction between those cases and this, the effect of which can be considered and determined during and after the retrial which we shall order. This distinction is that in each of the cases cited, the defect for which the municipality was held liable was plainly observable, while here the fact is otherwise. On their facts, therefore, those cases hold only that, where such a contract exists, and the contractor fails to keep the streets safe for travel, the municipality will be held liable for damages resulting from a visible defect even though such a time had not elapsed as would affect her with constructive notice thereof. It seems unreasonable, however, to hold a city responsible for the faults of an independent contractor, where they were not and could not have become known to her without tearing up the work done by the contractor. In fact, the fault here was one against which the city tried to protect the public, for her officer warned the employees of the contractor at that point to be careful so to bed the tie which tilted that tilting could not occur, and she had no notice that her warning had not been heeded.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 21, 306 Pa. 111, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-et-ux-v-union-paving-co-pa-1931.