Meredith v. Fehr

90 S.W.2d 1021, 262 Ky. 648, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 14, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 1021 (Meredith v. Fehr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meredith v. Fehr, 90 S.W.2d 1021, 262 Ky. 648, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 74 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming

This action was brought to recover damages for injuries sustained by the appellant (plaintiff below), an infant thirteen years of age, from falling into a cellar situated on a vacant lot of the appellee Fehr, in the city tof Louisville, from which a large and dilapidated old brick structure was then, and had been for some months before, in the course of being dismantled and razed, and by reason of which the lot, at the time of the accident, was left strewn with many large piles of debris and rubbish scattered here and there and along the walls of certain large basements or cellars, left open in the lot through the removal of the upper parts of the buildings covering them.

The suit was brought against the property owner, Frank Fehr, charging him with liability for appellant’s injury, by reason of his alleged negligence in thus leaving and maintaining.on his lot this open basement as constituting an “attractive nuisance,” open, dangerous and attractive to appellant and the other neighborhood children, and which lot, it is charged, the appellee knew they frequented and used as a playground. Also the appellee Tabb, doing business as the *650 Tabb Storage Warehouse & Freight Transfer Line, was named and sued as codefendant in ";he action, upon the ground of respondeat superior for the wrongful act of his servant or negro teamster in throwing a rock at appellant as he ran along the side of the open cellar, which, it is claimed, caused him, when dodging it, to fall into the cellar and sustain the injuries complained ¡of.

The circumstances and facts attending the happening of plaintiff’s accident, the concurring causes thereof, and the resulting injury complained of, for which appellees are sued as liable in damages therefor, are shown by the record to be as follows:

In March, 1933,, the "appellee Frank Fehr, the owner of the lot in question, contracted with one R. R. 'Riddell to dismantle and raze the outer and inner walls of the large old brick structure, known as the old Senn & Ackerman Brewing Company, located on the south side of Main street between Seventeenth and Eighteenth Streets, Louisville, Ky. This old building ranged in height from two to five stories and covered and enclosed the entire lot, fronting some 300 feet on Main street and extending back some 200 feet to its southern property line on Pirtle alley and from Eighteenth street on the west to its east wall abutting on an alleyway, some 100 or more feet west of Seventeenth street.

Further, it appears that Riddell, when entering upon the razing of this building, obtained a city permit authorizing its dismantling and that the wrecking work progressed under the supervision of the city building inspector, as required for safeguarding the public from risk and exposure to injury.

Within the large inclosure of the building’s outer walls, standing upon the boundary lines _ of the lot, were numerous brick partitions, separating the old brewery into various departments. On the southwest corner of the lot there stood its power house, and adjoining that on the east was an ice house, and yet further on the east side of the lot there were now left open the old distilling cellars, the lower and deeper one of which was situated at the southeast „oraer of the lot, into which it is shown that the plaintiff while running along its wall upon the occasion in evidence accidentally fell and received his injury.

*651 Such we find by the record was the condition on September 25, 1933, of this rubbish strewn lot with its open cellar pits, extending along its eastern portion, when Charles Meredith, the thirteen year old plaintiff and several of his companions gained entrance thereto through the half dismantled old power house, standing upon the lot’s extreme southwest corner, where fortified behind its partially wrecked walls, the boys, in anticipation both of fun and mischief, ventured to throw chunks of plaster and bricks, plaintiff states, at a team of. mules (belonging to the appellee transfer company), which they discovered passing near by along the alley, followed by the negro teamster in charge of them. This, their well-laid plan of sport, however, like many other plans of both mice and men, went quickly awry, due to the unsuspected ugly mood and temper of the mules’ attendant, who, scenting strife in the flying missiles of the boys ambushed attack, at once assumed the offensive by loudly uttering threats of reprisal and laying down a return barrage of flying rocks.

This unexpected turn in events so frightened the warring teamster’s young assailants that they forthwith, being a mobile force, sought safety in panicky flight, and hied themselves away, over and across the lot’s rough, terrain of brick and mortar piles, in an eastwardly course, leading by the open cellar pits, in order to quickly reach their much-desired objective of a point of exit and escape they knew was to be found on the eastern side of this battlefield and thus avert the retributive justice threatened, if caught by this irate nemesis, so determinably pursuing them. However, in this hope they reckoned without their foe, for he, all unsuspected by them, while they were executing their hurried “get-a-way,” “took rounders” on them, by so maneuvering a reverse order of pursuit as to head them off just as appellant was staging his risky, thrilling run over and along the rubbish covered side walls of the open cellar, where he again discovered the avenging specter of his doughty foe in the very act of hurling, with such unerring aim, yet another rock at his head, as to force him, to avoid the blow, to duck and dodge, which caused him to stumble and fall into the deep cellar pit and fracture both legs.

*652 This, the plaintiff’s version of his harrowing encounter with the negro driver, and his chasing and rocking him upon the occasion of his fall and injury, alleged to have been a concurrent cause of it, is all too modestly denied by the teamster, who declined to share in the brief honors of the skirmish or to risk his job by confessing his dramatic acting of such Talus-like exploits.

However, considering this detailed matter from the plaintiff’s angle, as to its bearing and effect upon the questions presented by this appeal, the plaintiff substantially so reports the facts and circumstances of his fall, and states that he was first thrown at by the negro, when he and his companions were prowling about in the old power house, whereupon they fled therefrom easterwardly across the lot, by way of the ¡open cellars, not because they were “attractive places,” to him or because he was ignorant of the risk and danger assumed in his running along' their rubbish littered top walls, but that, while realizing the danger, he chose such way out as affording the best available means of ¡escaping the angry negro; that he at the time knew and realized the danger of .the open pit into which he fell, but that he also knew that the other way ¡out by a Main street opening was equally dangerous.

Upon such evidence the court so instructed the. jury as to give plaintiff, as an infant of tender years, the advantage of recovering under the “attractive nuisance” doctrine.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 1021, 262 Ky. 648, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-fehr-kyctapphigh-1936.