Owen v. City of New York

141 A.D. 217, 126 N.Y.S. 38, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3845
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 141 A.D. 217 (Owen v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owen v. City of New York, 141 A.D. 217, 126 N.Y.S. 38, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3845 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Laughlie, J. :

About midday on the 4th day of December, 1907, the plaintiff was walking in a westerly direction on the northerly sidewalk of Seventy-seventh street, between Columbus and Amsterdam avenues, and when she arrived at a point in front of Public School No. 87, about seventy-five feet east'of Amsterdam avenue, she slipped and fell and sustained the injuries to recover for which this action is brought. The negligence with which the city is charged in the complaint is failure to remove the snow and ice which had accumulated and remained in front of the said premises during the night and up to the time when said injuries were sustained,” and in the construction of the walk in front of the said premises, in that said walk was built upon a slant to the curb, thereby causing an incline toward the street curb.” There is no other allegation in the complaint with respect to the construction or slant of the walk, and the only other allegation with respect to the snow and ice is as follows: “ That said show and icé had remained all night and the entire morning [219]*219up to the time when said accident occurred, and no effort had been made up to that time to clean off the walk in front of. said premises or to take off the ice.” It is not alleged that the city owned the adjacent premises, but it is alleged' that Public School Ho. 87 was under its. supervision and control. This cannot be true, for regardless of the .ownership it must be under the supervision and control of the board of education.

The plaintiff testified that she was on her way from her boarding house at Ho. 105 West Seventy-seventh street to Amsterdam avenue on an errand; that she observed that the children had been sliding with sleds in front of the school, and she endeavored to go towards the fence to avoid an accident; that “ the sidewalk was full of ice and snow; it was glassy ice, quite glassy, where the children were sliding;' the children were sliding- there on their sleds ; they were coasting; coasting down the grade to Amsterdam avenue from the school; * * * there was much of a space where the children had been sliding that was worn down; quite a good deal; I.avoided that space and went towards the fence; ' * * * when I fell my feet went up, I went back; both of my feet did not slip from under me; the left foot; it had snowed the night before ; I couldn’t tell if there was very much snow in the streets; * * * there were no ashes or anything of that sort on the walk ; * * * there was so much ice there ” that she could not tell whether there was a slant from the fence to the curb ; that she had rubbers on ; that “ the condition of the walk was glassy, that is, a smooth surface; some parts near the fence were chunked up.” On cross-examination she testified that the inner half of the walk next to the fence “ was cleared off ;” that the loose snow had been removed, .but that “it was all chunked, rough ; ” that she fell “ on the part of the sidewalk, just where the sliding was; I fell on the slippery part, on the icy part; that was nearer the curb; I slipped and my foot went from under me.” It was shown that the width of the sidewalk at the point of the accident was eleven feet; that the slope from the fence to the curb-was one and three-quarters inches, and that the slope towards Amsterdam avenue was about three feet in the hundred feet. The physician and surgeon who attended the plaintiff testified that the Walk “ was in a slippery condition; it was made worse by the boys making a sliding pond from the fence to the [220]*220gutter; ” that tire snow had not been removed from the premises in front of the schoolhouse. This witness was permitted to testify over the objection and exception duly taken, on the ground that' the evidence was not within the issue, that the walk had not been cleaned all winter, and that the snow had been allowed to accumulate from a storm a day or two before and also the night before, and that the snow was not all removed, and the last storm covered up what' remained on the sidewalk. It was shown by the records of the Meteorological Observatory in Central Park at Sixty-fourth street and Fifth avenue, that three-quarters of an .inch of snow fell on the second of December, two and one-half inches on the third, and that on the day of the accident it commenced snowing at eight-thirty a. m., and continued until noon and that one-half inch had fallen up to noon; that the temperature on the morning of the fourth of December was at freezing until about five a. m., when it fell to thirty-one degrees, and. at nine o’clock fell to thirty degrees and remained at that temperature until afternoon.. In behalf of the defendant a police officer whose post included the scene of the accident, the principal, janitor and assistant janitor of the school, and an inspector of the board of education were called as witnesses. Their testimony tends to show that all the. loose snow and ice was removed from the walk early in the morning, and that at the time of -the accident there was no accumulation of snow .and icé on the walk, and that it was not in a dangerous or unsafe condition for use by pedestrians and that the children had no sleds and used no sleds on the walk. Tlie complaint was not amended so as to charge that any of the snow or ice had been neglectfully allowed' to remain on the walk prior to the day of the accident. The'court, in submitting tbe case to the jury, limited the liability of the city to the charge of neglect with respect to permitting snow and ice to accumulate on the. walk, and instructed the jury that they were only to consider the evidence with respect to the grade or slope of the walk as bearing on the question as to whether • the city performed its duty with respect to removing the snow and ice. Neither the charge in' the complaint nor the evidence showed actual notice to the city with respect to the condition of the walk. The complaint contains no complaint with respect to the longitudinal grade of the walk, but it' does complain of tbe [221]*221slope from the fence to the curb. .It is to be presumed that the walk was constructed according to a plan and on a grade established by the proper local authorities, in which case the municipality would not be liable. (Urquhart v. City of Ogdensburg, 91 N. Y. 73; 97 id. 238.) Moreover, there is no evidence that a slope towards the curb of one and three-quarters inches in eleven feet to carry off surface water is unusual and the court might take judicial notice that it is not.

Counsel for the respondent argues- that the longitudinal decline in the walk was a concurring cause of the accident, notwithstanding the fact that no negligence was predicated thereon in the complaint, and the question was- not left to the jury.. He cites Clemence v. City of Auburn (66 N. Y. 334) to sustain his contention. In that case, however, the defect was properly pleaded, and it appeared that there was a longitudinal slope in the walk of six inches in three and a half feet, made by direction of the chairman of. the street committee, who was without authority in the premises, to connect the grade of one street- with another and it did not conform to the lawfully established grade.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 A.D. 217, 126 N.Y.S. 38, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owen-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1910.