Manuel v. Mayor of Cumberland

73 A. 705, 111 Md. 196, 1909 Md. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 73 A. 705 (Manuel v. Mayor of Cumberland) 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
Manuel v. Mayor of Cumberland, 73 A. 705, 111 Md. 196, 1909 Md. LEXIS 110 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, James W. Manuel, on the eighth day of April, 1901, was an employee of the appellee, the Mayor and City Council of Cumberland, and was engaged with other workmen in digging a trench in which a sewer pipe was to be laid, the work being done under the immediate supervision of Lem. Brant who testified that he was “foreman of all the City’s sewer works under the Street Superintendent and City Engineer.” This sewer trench was about five and a half feet *202 deep. Parallel to this trench in the same street, Maryland avenue, was a gas main, which at a certain point on this avenue was about 16 or 18 inches from this sewer trench, and was about two and a half feet below the surface of the street. When the work for the day began on April 8th, the plaintiff with Wm. C. Brant and J. W. Clark, were about to get into the trench, when Wm. C. Brant said to the foreman: “Would-n’t it be better to brace the sides of this ditch?” Wm. C. Brant testified that there had been a little rain and snow the night before, and while he did not think the trench looked dangerous, he thought it would be better braced. The foreman replied: “It is all right and will soon dry off; go down in the ditch and get to work.” The plaintiff and Clark corroborated Wm. C. Brant as to his suggestion of bracing the sides of the trench, and as to the foreman’s reply, but he denied both the suggestion and his reply. The men got into the ditch, and between eleven and twelve o’clock, the side of the ditch between it and the gas main fell into the sewer trench for a distance of eight or ten feet. It slid in almost in a slab and pinned Manuel against the other side of the trench up to his waist. His left arm was buried under the earth and his wrist was badly injured. The bones of the wrist were dislocated and there was a split fracture' of the outer bone of the forearm, which Dr. Smith, the only physician and surgeon sworn, testified was a serious and. permanent injury.

Section 27 of the City Ordinances was read in evidence,, which requires the City to keep an underground map of the City, showing all street lines, water courses, streams, bridges and culverts; “the location of all sewers or drains; of all gas mains, service pipe's and valves and their size; of all steam heating pipes; and any other data below the surface of the ground along the streets or alleys that may be deemed of value for information as against underground improvements or'repairs,” and there is a presumption in law that this requirement was duly observed. It was. admitted that the gas main in Maryland avenue in question in this case, was' pu'c *203 down, under the authority of "the franchise and ordinance of the City hy the Cumberland Gas Light Company, under the direction and supervision of the City Engineer. It therefore appears that the City is chargeable with full knowledge of the location of this gas main, and its depth below the surface of the street, while the undisputed evidence is that neither the plaintiff nor any of the men knew of the location of the gas main. It does not appear from the evidence that the foreman knew of its location, and in the absence of positive evidence that he did, the presumption is he did not. Wm. C. Brant and Clark both quit that work next day, and got employment elsewhere. It also appears from the testimony of the foreman that the City Engineer gave him the grade and location for the sewer trench, and that his directions were followed in its construction, but that he was not furnished with any map to show where gas or water mains were located.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony the defendant offered a prayer to withdraw the case from the jury, but as this prayer was renewed at the close of the defendant’s testimony and of the whole case, the prayer first offered needs no consideration.

The-plaintiff offered six prayers of which the first, second and third were rejected, and the fourth, fifth and sixth were granted.

The plaintiff’s fourth prayer instructed the jury that the defendant, under the ordinance above mentioned, was charged with knowledge of the location, size and depth of all pipes and mains put down under its streets under any franchise granted by it.

The plaintiff’s sixth prayer instructed the jury that the defendant was hound to use reasonable care to provide a safe place for plaintiff to -WQrk in, and that if said place was unsafe for that purpose by reason of the want of such care, then the plaintiff was entitled to recover, unless the jury found he knew, or ought to have known by the exercise of reasonable *204 care, that it was unsafe, or unless by his own negligence he directly contributed to the accident.

The fourth prayer is the usual prayer on the measure of damages in event of recovery.

The plaintiff’s rejected prayers will be set out by the reporter.

The substance of the first prayer is that if the falling of the side of the sewer trench was due to its immediate proximity to the gas main; that the existence and location of the gas main was unknown to the plaintiff, but was known to the defendant, and that it was so located by its authority; that the defendant was negligent in not having the sewer trench braced at that point, and that such bracing would have prevented the accident, then the plaintiff could recover if the jury found he was himself in the exercise of due care.

The second prayer presents the same legal propositions, with slight verbal changes.

The third prayer instructs the jury that if they find Wm, C. Brant suggested the bracing of the sides of the trench before the accident, and the foreman replied that was not necessary and ordered the plaintiff to proceed with the work, that such reply and order was an assurance of safety upon which he had the right to rely, and if he was subsequently injured as claimed in the evidence, he was entitled to recover unless the danger was obvious' to the sense of any man, and unless he failed to exercise ordinary care in going into the trench under the circumstances.

The defendant offered seven prayers. The first and seventh, which sought to take the case from the jury were rejected, and this ruling was so obviously correct that we shall not pause to consider it. The sixth, which was conceded, instructed the jury that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to establish his ease by a preponderance of testimony. The defendant’s second, third, fourth, and fifth prayers were granted. These will also be set out by the reporter.

The second prayer asserts that the mere falling in of the side of the trench is not sufficient evidence of negligence on *205 the defendant’s part entitling plaintiff to recover. The fourth and fifth prayers relate to the question whether the dangerous condition or the character of the trench was open and obvious, and these prayers both present the same proposition as the qualification contained in the closing paragraph of the plaintiff’s rejected third prayer, and in the body of his first and second rejected prayers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 A. 705, 111 Md. 196, 1909 Md. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manuel-v-mayor-of-cumberland-md-1909.