Ogilvie v. Metro Gov't. v. Nashille Electric Svc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 29, 1998
Docket01A01-9709-CV-00466
StatusPublished

This text of Ogilvie v. Metro Gov't. v. Nashille Electric Svc. (Ogilvie v. Metro Gov't. v. Nashille Electric Svc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogilvie v. Metro Gov't. v. Nashille Electric Svc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE FILED May 29, 1998 DONNA S. OGILVIE ) ) Cecil W. Crowson Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Appellate Court Clerk ) Appeal No. ) 01-A-01-9709-CV-00466 VS. ) ) Davidson Circuit ) No. 95C-1673 METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF ) NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON ) COUNTY, TENNESSEE, ) ) Defendant/Appellee. )

APPEALED FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF DAVIDSON COUNTY AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE THOMAS W. BROTHERS, JUDGE

JOEL H. MOSELEY MOSELEY & MOSELEY Suite 300, One Church Street 101 Church Street Nashville, Tennessee 37201-1609 Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellant

JAMES L. MURPHY Director of Law Department of Law of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County

PHILIP D. BALTZ Metropolitan Attorney 222 Third Avenue North, Suite 501 Nashville, Tennessee 37201 Attorney for Defendant/Appellee

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED

BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE

CONCUR: TODD, P.J., M.S. BUSSART, W., S.J.

OPINION The plaintiff sued the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and

Davidson County, alleging that the dangerous and unsafe condition of a city sidewalk

caused her to fall and sustain personal injuries. After a bench trial, the Circuit Court

of Davidson County found that the sidewalk was not defective, unsafe, or dangerous

and that the plaintiff was more than fifty percent at fault. We affirm.

I.

On June 26, 1994, the plaintiff, in the company of her husband and son,

walked along the sidewalk on the south side of Union Street in Nashville. At some

point between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, she stumbled over a “lip” a little over one inch

high in the sidewalk. The lip resulted from the failure to build or maintain the sidewalk

flush with the top of a concrete underground chamber, the surface of which formed

part of the sidewalk. Ms. Ogilvie fell and sustained painful personal injuries.

II.

Because this is an action against the local government, the Tennessee

Governmental Tort Liability Act applies to the claim. After providing (or reiterating) a

general rule of immunity, Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-20-201(a), the Act removes the

immunity of a local government for injuries “caused by a defective, unsafe, or

dangerous condition of any street, alley, sidewalk or highway, owned or controlled by

such governmental entity. Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-20-203(a).1 Subsection (b) requires

as a precondition to liability that the governmental entity have notice, actual or

constructive, of the dangerous condition. The City does not deny that it had notice of

the condition or that the sidewalk was under its ownership and control.

1 Governmental immunity is removed for certain other torts by other sections of the Act. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-20-202, 204, and 205.

-2- The real question, then, is whether the sidewalk was defective, unsafe,

or dangerous. The trial judge held that it was neither, and relying in part on that

conclusion, he dismissed the claim. The question of what condition of a sidewalk will

make it defective, dangerous, or unsafe has troubled the courts for many years. Our

books contain numerous cases dealing with sidewalk irregularities from great to small.

In City of Memphis v. McCrady, 124 S.W.2d 248 (Tenn. 1938) the court held that a

two and one-half inch “lip” at an expansion joint in the sidewalk, over which the plaintiff

tripped in broad daylight, would not subject the city to liability. In Batts v. City of

Nashville, 123 S.W.2d 1099 (Tenn. App. 1939) the court surveyed a number of cases

that dealt with defects of various sizes and shapes in sidewalks or streets. The

defects ranged from a two and three-eighths inch difference between sections of a

sidewalk, McCormick v. City of Racine, 277 N.W. 646 (1938), to a three inch deep

hole in a sidewalk, Getzoff v. City of New York, 64 N.Y.S. 636 (1900), and in each

case the court held as a matter of law that the condition did not render the area

defective or dangerous.

In fairness, we should point out that the Tennessee cases all say that

liability does not depend on how high the irregularity is. No bright line can be drawn

on the size and depth of holes in the sidewalk beyond which the city would be liable.

The court in Batts summed up the rule in this way:

It would be impossible to derive a rule from the numerous cases by which to fix the line of demarcation between actionable size and depth of holes in streets and sidewalks and nonactionable size and depth. The cases all come back to the question of whether or not it could be reasonably anticipated, by a reasonably prudent person, that a traveler on the sidewalk or highway unexpectedly encountering the obstruction or hole, would suffer injury, or as some of the cases express it, would probably suffer injury.

123 S.W.2d at 1104.

In City of Memphis v. McCrady, 124 S.W.2d 248, 249 (Tenn. 1938) the

court put it this way:

-3- The municipality cannot be held as an insurer, nor can it be charged with the duty to correct slight defects in sidewalks resulting from inequality in the expansion joints, produced by natural causes, where the inequality or unevenness does not make a dangerous obstruction calculated to produce injury to persons exercising reasonable care. And so, where the evidence is conflicting or the facts such as to authorize different inferences as to whether the defect is a dangerous obstruction calculated to cause injury, the case must be submitted to the jury, but, where the defect or obstruction is such that reasonable men would not differ in the conclusion that the obstruction or defect was not dangerous to travel in the ordinary modes by persons exercising due care, a verdict should be directed.

The courts have consistently held that whether a particular site is

defective, unsafe, or dangerous, thereby removing governmental immunity, is a

question of fact. Coln v. City of Savannah, ____ S.W. ____ (Tenn. 1998); Helton v.

Knox County, 922 S.W.2d 877 (Tenn. 1996). And the factual determination involves

the analysis specified in Batts above.

The trial judge found that the sidewalk where the plaintiff fell was not

defective, unsafe, or dangerous. That finding comes to this court with a presumption

of correctness. Rule 13(d), Tenn. R. Civ. Proc. We cannot find that the evidence

preponderates against it.

III.

In what may or may not be a trend, the more recent cases have

assumed that more minor deviations in the surface of the sidewalk are dangerous and

have focused on how comparative fault principles affect the duties of the respective

-4- parties. See Coln v. City of Savannah, ____ S.W. ____ (Tenn. 1998);2 Broyles v. City

of Knoxville, No. 03A01-9505-CV-00166 (filed at Knoxville, Aug. 30, 1995). So, an

argument could be made that the older cases we have cited have been nullified by the

adoption of comparative fault. The Supreme Court decision in Coln v. City of

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Related

Eaton v. McLain
891 S.W.2d 587 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1994)
McIntyre v. Balentine
833 S.W.2d 52 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1992)
Helton v. Knox County, Tenn.
922 S.W.2d 877 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1996)
Batts v. City of Nashville
123 S.W.2d 1099 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1938)
City of Memphis v. McCrady
124 S.W.2d 248 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1938)
Getzoff v. City of New York
51 A.D. 450 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)
McCormick v. City of Racine
277 N.W. 646 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1938)

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