Miller v. Erie

16 A.2d 37, 340 Pa. 177, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 692
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 1940
DocketAppeals, 183, 184, 215 and 216
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 16 A.2d 37 (Miller v. Erie) 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
Miller v. Erie, 16 A.2d 37, 340 Pa. 177, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 692 (Pa. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

The City of Erie, original defendant, and John Reinhold, Jr., added defendant, appeal from judgments on verdicts in favor of the minor plaintiff, Miller, and his parents, in an action to recover for injuries sustained when a pillar, part of a barrier across the cartway of a street, fell on the minor plaintiff. The barrier had been erected by Reinhold. The accident occurred in a section of the city which abuts on the bay lying much below the level of the street intersection of Bayview and Lincoln Avenues. Bayview Avenue extends east and west; Lincoln leads into Bayview from the south but does not cross it; both are paved to the intersection but Bayview is not improved for travel east of the intersection. Along the eastern boundary .line of Lincoln Avenue and across the cartway of Bayview Avenue, where its improved surface ends, Reinhold erected two pillars, between which he hung two chains, each permanently fastened to a pillar at one end but, at the other, fastened only by a hook allowing the chains to be removed at will; unless removed they stopped vehicular traffic further east on Bayview Avenue. From a very short distance east of this barrier, the land slopes abruptly to the water level to which access is afforded from the top of the hill by a stairway of 137 steps.

*179 Defendant, Reinhold, brought in by the City on scire facias, owns and resides on premises at the southeast corner of the intersection of Bayview and Lincoln Avenues. There is evidence that before the streets had reached their present improvement, the portion of Bay-view Avenue east of Lincoln had been used as a “dump.” 1 In 1927 defendant Reinhold had four members of the City Council come to the place and look over it; he obtained their permission, for what it was worth, to construct the pillars and chains across that portion of Bayview Avenue extending east of Lincoln and leading to the declivity. The pillars were of brick outside and concrete inside; they were twenty-five inches square, mortared on a granite base twenty-eight inches square and two feet above ground, and extending some distance underground. On the top was a six-inch limestone cap. The height above ground was about eight feet eleven inches. That part of the pillar above the granite base, without the cap, weighed about twenty- *180 six hundred pounds. The chains were not tightly drawn, but sagged toward the center; the links were about one and a quarter inches long and the metal “maybe half or quarter inch” thick; the lower chain was fastened to the pillar about three feet from the ground and the upper about five feet. The distance between the pillars, according to the plan in evidence, was nearly twelve feet.

In June, 1938, the date of the injury, the minor plaintiff was fifteen years two months of age. He testified he was then in good health; weighed about 128 pounds ; “was just finishing ninth grade” in the Strong Vincent High School with “average” standing; was track manager of the school’s athletics and “went out for football.” He had gone down the steps to the water level to find friends. Later, he ascended the stairs to the level of the streets with them, two aged fourteen, and one, fifteen. They sat on the top chain. He testified: "... and Jimmie went first to the chain and got on, and then Roger went and sat beside him, on his right, and then George went over while I was unlocking the bicycles and sat on Jimmie’s left, then I came over and climbed on, on George’s left, and just as I got nicely settled it fell.” The witness, James Phillips, was fifteen years old, was in the eleventh grade in school, and weighed about 145 pounds. Roger Milloy gave his height as five feet ten and his weight as 135 pounds. Asked “Would it have been possible to swing very much on that chain?” he replied, “I think it would have been possible, but we are not babies, we don’t play around such things.” George Shapter was fourteen at the time and said he weighed 120 pounds. The weight of the four boys, given in the record as 528 pounds, pulled down that part of the northern pillar above the granite base so that it fell on the plaintiff.

Of the assignments of error, only one needs consideration : the refusal to enter judgments for the defendants notwithstanding the verdicts for the plaintiffs.

*181 In his statement of claim, plaintiff alleges that the city maintained a nuisance in the highway and that the pillars were erected “in a negligent and careless manner,” etc. The mere existence of a nuisance in a technical sense will not impose liability without also showing negligence constituting the legal cause of the harm for which recovery is sought: compare Hendricks v. Pyramid M. F. Corp., 328 Pa. 570, 195 A. 907; Dominices v. Monon. R. R. Co., 328 Pa. 203, 195 A. 747; Leoni v. Reinhard, 327 Pa. 391, 194 A. 490; Bonczek v. Phila., 338 Pa. 484, 13 A. 2d 414. This is not the ordinary case of an obstruction placed in a highway or on a sidewalk into which one may drive or fall over or into. It was not an obstacle to pedestrian travel; there was an unobstructed paved footway 2 alongside, presumably the footway traversed by the plaintiff and his companions on their way from the top of the steps.

The standard of duty required of the city was stated in Burns v. Bradford City, 137 Pa. 361, 367, 20 A. 997, to be: “A municipal corporation is not an insurer against all defects in its highways, but it is answerable for negligence in the performance of its duties in the construction and care of them. For a defect arising in them, without its fault or neglect, it is not liable, unless it has express notice, or the defect be so notorious as to be evident to all passers. If a defect is such that it is discovered by only one of a thousand or more persons who pass it in the ordinary pursuit of business or pleasure, can it be said to be notorious, or such a defect as the municipality is bound to take notice of? We think not.” In Malone v. Union Paving Co., 306 Pa. 111, 116, 159 A. 21, we said: “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 became observable to an officer exercising reasonable supervi *182 sion’: Lohr v. Philipsburg Borough, 156 Pa. 246, 249, 27 A. 133.” See also Good v. Philadelphia, 335 Pa. 13, 16, 6 A. 2d 101; German v. McKeesport, 137 Pa. Superior Ct. 41, 46, 8 A. 2d 437. The same rule applies with respect to defects resulting from unauthorized structures or conditions: see Lawrence v. Scranton, 284 Pa. 215, 222; 130 A. 428; Boyle v. Hazleton, 171 Pa. 167, 176, 33 A. 142; Beloud v. Sayre, 56 Pa. Superior Ct. 215, 221; Smith v. Henry, 66 Pa. Superior Ct. 538, 544.

The contention, on behalf of plaintiff, is that the barrier was defectively constructed and maintained in two respects: that the pillar was inadequately mortared to the granite base and that it was not doweled into the base.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 A.2d 37, 340 Pa. 177, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-erie-pa-1940.