Murdock Et Ux. v. Pa. Railroad Co.

27 A.2d 405, 150 Pa. Super. 156, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 142
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 1941
DocketAppeal, 41
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 405 (Murdock Et Ux. v. Pa. Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murdock Et Ux. v. Pa. Railroad Co., 27 A.2d 405, 150 Pa. Super. 156, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 142 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Stadtfeld, J.,

Opinion by

The plaintiffs brought suit to recover damages for the death of their son, a boy twelve years and eight months of age, who was drowned on August 17, 1934, while swimming in a small pond on land of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company.

The pond was located in a swampy wasteland in South Philadelphia near the Delaware River at a point approximately 4,000 feet South of Oregon Avenue, the nearest built-up section of the City of Philadelphia. While there was some evidence that there was a shack within the distance of a block from the pool and that a small development known as Martin’s Village was five or six blocks away, the photographs introduced in evidence by the defendant, the accuracy of which was acknowledged by plaintiffs’ witnesses, show the entire surrounding terrain and fail to indicate the presence of any dwelling houses within a distance of approximately a mile.

The pond was described as being thirty by sixty feet and was estimated to range in depth from two to five or six feet. It was a natural pond and apparently had no source other than rainfall or seepage.

A work track of the Pennsylvania Railroad passed at a short distance from the pond. A similar work track of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company was located within a distance of 100 feet. A private road to a coal dumper went by one end of the pond and this road was an extension of Delaware Avenue but had not been opened to the public.

Plaintiffs’ son and a group of five or six other boys walked two miles from their homes, on the day in question, to swim in the pond. It was testified that approximately, twenty other boys were in swimming when they arrived, and that many boys had swum in the pond for a period of several years, although the plaintiffs’ son was there on the day in question for the first *159 time. The boys who were already at the pond departed when Murdock arrived and he and his group of friends then swam for about an hour. Thereafter, his companions came out of the water and left the pond to play in some trees which were some distance away. Murdock desired to continue swimming, and when the boys returned an hour later they found that he had drowned.

His father and the boys who accompanied him testified that Murdock was a good swimmer. One of the witnesses said that he did not believe the boy was in any danger when they left him there, and that if he had thought so they would have taken him along with them when they departed. There was no evidence as to what caused plaintiffs’ son to drown. The statement of claim contained an averment that he had suffered an attack of cramps but there was no evidence at the trial to establish that fact, and the court permitted plaintiffs to amend the statement of claim to eliminate the averment.

The case came on for trial and the learned trial judge directed the jury to determine whether or not the pond constituted a playground, and if so whether the defendant had been guilty of negligence which caused Murdock’s death. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $2,000, and defendant,whose motion for a directed verdict in its favor had been refused, filed motions for judgment n. o. v. and for a new trial. Both of these motions were overruled. This appeal followed.

The allegations of negligence of defendant as set forth in plaintiffs’ statements, upon which the case was tried are: “(a) The defendant failed to keep its premises in a safe condition; (b) The defendant failed to safeguard the rights and privileges of minor boys who used defendant’s property as a playground; (c) In failing to have a watchman at aforesaid dangerous por *160 tions of defendant’s land, more particularly at said pool of water......” 1

The main question for our consideration is to ascertain in what respect the defendant was negligent in order to warrant a recovery. Plaintiffs base, their right to recover on the theory applicable to so-called “playground” cases. An examination of these cases will show that the law does not require a land owner to take unduly burdensome precautions which are not commensurate with the risk involved, even if the playground rule should be held to apply.

The test to be applied in determining the existence of a playground is set forth in the case of Fitzpatrick v. Penfield, 267 Pa. 564, 109 A. 653, as follows: “The amount of use that will bring otherwise private ground within the playground rule must depend to a large extent on the circumstances of each case. It may be said that the use contemplated is such as to cause the place to be generally known in. the immediate vicinity as a recreation center, and its occupancy should be shown to be of such frequency as to impress it with the obligation of ordinary care on the part of the owner.” (Italics supplied)

The requirement of the rule which was missing in the case at bar was proof that the pond was “generally known in the immediate vicinity as a recreation center”, it appearing that there were no persons living within a mile of the pond, and the boys who swam there being residents of a neighborhood lying approximately two miles away.

The importance of the establishment of a “reputation in the immediate vicinity” is obvious. In the decisions, where recovery was permitted for accidents on playgrounds, the locus in each instance immediately bordered both the homes of the children using the play *161 grounds and the industrial or other establishments of the land owner. Thus, when recovery was permitted, it appeared clearly that the owner of the property knew of the playground, not only from the fact that it was actually within his view, but also from the fact that its use as such was known to all the people in the surrounding community. As a part of that community, he could not deny knowledge of the use of his property when it had acquired a reputation as a “recreation center” among those in his immediate neighborhood.

In the instant case, the witnesses testified that the pond was known as a swimming pool among the people in the neighborhood in which the boys lived. This was bounded by Snyder Avenue on the south, Reed Street on the north, and Third Street on the west, but this entire district, from which the swimmers came, was more than two miles from the pond.

Furthermore, there were no persons living in the immediate vicinity of the pond to see the boys swim-mining there, the nearest built-up section of the city being above Oregon Avenue, more than 4,000 feet away. There was no office of the railroad within miles of the pond and nothing to charge its responsible officials with knowledge of the use which was being made of its property.

Several of the boys testified that on occasion while they were swimming, railroad employees had gone by the pond and that they had made no protest, but these men were track men who were working on the work track and who paid no attention to the boys and may not even have seen them. If this evidence amounts to anything, it is merely notice to the railroad that boys occasionally swam in the pool. It fell far short of establishing that the pool was known by the railroad to have become a recreation center.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 405, 150 Pa. Super. 156, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murdock-et-ux-v-pa-railroad-co-pasuperct-1941.