Nebel v. Pittsburgh

126 A.2d 449, 386 Pa. 394, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 1956
DocketAppeal, 148
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 A.2d 449 (Nebel v. Pittsburgh) 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
Nebel v. Pittsburgh, 126 A.2d 449, 386 Pa. 394, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 403 (Pa. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Chidsey,

This appeal resulted from the refusal of the court below, sitting en banc, to take off a compulsory nonsuit which was entered on the ground there was no proof that the defendant municipality was negligent. The suit was originally brought against the City of Pittsburgh, and the original defendant joined Marie Leahy as an additional defendant.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, as we are required to do (O’Connor v. Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Company, 362 Pa. 404, 66 A. 2d 818), the facts are: On the afternoon of January 29, 1952, at approximately four P.M., the plaintiff, then 69 years of age, was injured as a result of a fall on Dagmar Avenue in the City of Pittsburgh. Her fall was caused by a patch of ice which was hidden from her view by a fall of fresh snow less than one inch in depth. Dagmar Avenue is a steep street and the plaintiff was walking uphill on the sidewalk to the home of her daughter, 1634 Dagmar Avenue, where she had been living for approximately a year. The plaintiff testified that she had boarded a trolley car in downtown *396 Pittsburgh for her home approximately a half hour before the accident and at that time it was not snowing; that it began snowing during the ride home and was still snowing at the time she fell. The sidewalk involved was made of concrete and there was no evidence that it was defective or in a state of disrepair. The plaintiff stated that she was having no difficulty in Avalking along the sidewalk and that she Avas the first person to Avalk on the sideAvalk after the siioav had commenced to fall; that Avhen she reached a point in front of 1622 Dagmar Avenue, the home of the additional defendant, she suddenly fell. No one Avitnessed the plaintiff’s fall except herself. Immediately next to the property owned by the additional defendant, going uphill, is a vacant lot oAvned by the City of Pittsburgh. Plaintiff testified that after falling, she discovered ice at the point of her fall underneath the snow, that the ice Avas rough and had ridges on it and extended “some distance”. Plaintiff did not describe hoAV large an area the ice covered, hoAV thick it Avas, or describe the ridges or give their size. No other witness described the icy condition of the sidewalk on the day in question and there Avas no evidence Avhatsoever as to hoAV long the ice had existed at that particular spot preceding the accident. Nor Avas there any evidence of when any precipitation of snow or rain had occurred prior thereto.

Plaintiff contended at the trial that an unusual drainage condition existed on the vacant lot OAvned by the defendant city Avhereon an excessive volume of water drained from the lot out onto the sideAvalk and doAvnhill over the sideAvalk of the additional defendant; that in periods of cold Aveather this drainage would freeze, causing an icy condition to exist on the sidewalk, and that this icy condition was Avhat caused the plaintiff to fall. It was not contended that there were structures of any *397 kind on tliis lot carrying the water onto the sidewalk or that the water which flowed from it was anything but a natural runoff from rain or snow which fell on the lot and followed the natural downhill lay of the land. The plaintiff testified that she had no knowledge of any drainage problem with respect to surface water coming off the vacant lot ana draining over the sidewalk. Mr. Walsh, plaintiffs grandson, testified that approximately half a dozen times he had seen water flowing from the lot onto the sidewalk and at times he had seen it frozen; that he had seen ice on this portion of the sidewalk when there was ice nowhere else on Bagmar Avenue at the time. However, it was developed on cross-examination that the only time Mr. Walsh observed ice at the place in question was when he was unable to drive his car up the hill due to the street being covered with ice and snow. Mrs. Korenich, plaintiffs granddaughter, who had lived at 1834 Bagmar Avenue for a year preceding the accident, testified that she had seen water draining from the lot onto the sidewalk and that she had seen ice form from it. She stated that she had seen this spot wet when the rest of the pavement was dry and that she had seen ice at this spot when there was no ice elsewhere on Bagmar Avenue. She did not say how often she had seen this spot wet or icy, or how much ice or water were present when the rest of the sidewalk was dry, or how long after a rain or snow this portion of the sidewalk remained wet or frozen. The additional defendant, Mrs. Marie Leahy, called by the plaintiff as on cross-examination, testified that she had lived at 1822 Bagmar Avenue for thirty years and during that time water and mud had drained from the higher city-owned lot into the Leahy cellar malting it necessary for her to put up bricks and plant hedges which successfully prevented this drainage from entering her home. She also testi *398 fied that her sidewalk was installed approximately four and a half years before the accident and that the sidewalk in front of the city-owned property was put in sometime later on, although she could not say exactly when. 1

The question of the liability of a municipality for the existence of ice or snow upon its sidewalks has been often considered by our appellate courts. A city is not liable for personal injuries sustained by a fall on a sidewalk, where it appears that the accident was due to the general slippery condition of the street which occurs in all cities in wintertime. This is so because of the practical impossibility of keeping streets and sidewalks free from ice in this climate during the winter season: Bailey v. Oil City et al., 305 Pa. 325, 157 A. 486; Fritzky et al. v. Pittsburgh, 340 Pa. 217, 16 A. 2d 422. There may be liability, however, where substantial ridges of ice have formed and are allowed to remain for an unreasonable length of time as a dangerous obstruction to travel: Llewellyn v. Wilkes-Barre, 254 Pa. 196, 98 A. 886; Whitton v. E. A. Gable Company, 331 Pa. 429, 200 A. 2d 644; Goodman et al., v. Corn Exchange National Bank and Trust Company et al., 331 Pa. 587, 200 A. 2d 642. This is not a case of a “general slippery condition” of the streets, requiring for recovery the existence of hills and *399 ridges allowed to remain for an unreasonable length of time. Plaintiff contends that this is a case where surface water frequently froze at but one place and created a slippery, unexpected hazard by reason of the negligence of the defendant city in permitting water to drain from its own property down and across the adjoining sidewalk, and in failing to correct this condition by proper drains.

An excellent exposition of the legal principles applicable to such cases is found in Strauch v. Scranton, 157 Pa. Superior Ct. 174, 42 A. 2d 96, affirmed per curiam in 353 Pa. 10, 44 A. 2d 258, and quoted with approval in Solinsky v. Wilkes-Barre, 375 Pa. 87, 99 A. 2d 570. There a pedestrian was injured by a fall on an icy rut in an unpaved roadway. The ice was formed by natural surface drainage. There were no sidewalks along the street in question and the roadway was commonly used by pedestrians as a footway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 A.2d 449, 386 Pa. 394, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebel-v-pittsburgh-pa-1956.