Patterson v. Palley Manufacturing Co.

61 A.2d 861, 360 Pa. 259, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 487
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1948
DocketAppeals, 189 and 190
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 61 A.2d 861 (Patterson v. Palley Manufacturing Co.) 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
Patterson v. Palley Manufacturing Co., 61 A.2d 861, 360 Pa. 259, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 487 (Pa. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Horace Stern,

In this accident.case a superabundance of detail in the testimony has resulted in.an unnecessarily voluminous record of over 800 printed pages. The verdicts were in favor of. plaintiffs and the court overruled defendant’s motion for judgment n. o.-v. Considering on the-present appeal only the evidence favorable to plaintiffs, — as is proper in connection with such a motion,— the facts, when confined to those necessary for judicial determination of the issues involved, are as follows:

Palley Manufacturing Company owned and operated a factory building on-the southwest corner of Bidwell Street and Faulsey Way on the. North‘Side of the City of Pittsburgh. In 1941 it purchased an additional strip of ground to the rear of its property and extending at right angles to it, of a width of 60 feet and a length of 484 feet from Faulsey Way on the north to Western Avenue on the south. ' Approximately midway on this strip, and • quite distant, therefore, from any of the surrounding streets, was a 75-year-old stable building constructed of common brick-and lime -mortar';-it was 1^2r stoines in height, extended 52'feet from *262 east to west and 25 feet from north to south, and its east wall was parallel to, and about 2 or 3 feet distant from, the rear or west wall of another factory building on Bidwell Street belonging to Arbuthnot-Stephenson Company. Palley Manufacturing Company, desiring to construct an addition to its plant on this newly acquired lot, entered into a contract with Branna Construction Corporation for that purpose, and also into a separate supplemental contract for the demolition of the stable building. On March 27, 1945, the latter work was started by Branna Construction Corporation and was completed on the fourth day, but meanwhile, on the evening of the third day, March 29, between 6:30 and 7:00 o’clock, the accident occurred which gave rise to the present litigation.

It appears that the lot on which the stable was located had been used for many years by children in the neighborhood as a playground. While the work of demolition was under way a number of these children, including plaintiff John Patterson, a lad then two weeks short of 14 years of age, were in the habit, after school hours, of congregating, at one end of the lot in order to watch the operation, and, in the late afternoons after the workmen had retired, and again in the evenings, they would play around on the premises, especially in and about the partially dismantled stable building; their presence at such times was known generally to the workmen, and the official of Branna Construction Corporation who was in charge of the work had received direct information in regard thereto.

On the afternoon of March 29 a rather heavy rain began to fall at about a quarter to three o’clock, whereupon the men quit work, and, as the rain continued until on toward four o’clock, they did not return then to the job but quit the premises for the day. At that time the work had proceeded to a point where substantially all the walls of the stable had been levelled except a part of the east wall which still stood to a height *263 variously estimated at from 10 to 15 feet. In the afternoon, and again in the evening, several of the children, as on previous occasions, entered the stable area and played on and around the remaining portions of the walls. Suddenly the accident occurred. While three of the boys stood on the top of the east wall and the Patterson lad was standing below on the inner side of the wall and about 3 or 4 feet distant from it and was talking to them, a large section of the wall suddenly collapsed and young Patterson was buried from the waist down under a mass of bricks. The result was that he was severely and permanently injured, and he, by his father as guardian, and his father in his own right, brought the present action against Palley Manufacturing Company and Branna Construction Corporation to recover damages. At the close of the trial the court gave binding instructions in favor of Palley Manufacturing Company, and its action in so doing is not contested by any of the other parties. The jury returned verdicts against Branna Construction Corporation in the sum of $10,000 for the minor and $2,500 for the father. A motion of Branna Construction Corporation for judgment n. o. v. being overruled, that defendant now appeals, while plaintiffs also appeal from a refusal by the court to grant motions which they filed for a new trial because of alleged inadequacy of the verdicts.

The theory upon which plaintiffs claim liability on the part of Branna Construction Corporation is that its workmen, when quitting the job on the afternoon of March 29th, were leaving the premises in a condition which constituted a foreseeable danger to children who could have been expected to come that evening into the stable and play around the east wall. This danger resulted from the fact that, in the course of the demolition, bricks had fallen or been thrown into the narrow space between the east wall of the stable and the rear wall of the Arbuthnot-Stephenson building to a height equal to that of the east wall as it then stood. An expert *264 builder and wrecker who testified on behalf of plaintiffs stated that it was negligence on the part of the workmen to throw the bricks, or allow them to fall, in this narrow space, since their weight,- massed in that position, would exert a pressure against the wall itself; that weight and resulting pressure were greatly augmented by-the absorption of the rain-water by the porous bricks; moreover the wall would naturally have been softened and weakened by the rainfall upon it tending to pulverize the mortar; there was also testimony that the workmen had scraped or chipped a section of the entire length of the wall, at a height of about three or four-inches above the ground, with mattocks,- sledge hammers and crowbars. - The effect of all these circumstances was, ■ according to the-expert, that the collapse of the wall might readily have been anticipated. Since Branna Construction Corporation had been put on notice that children had each evening been playing on and around this wall and it had every reason to believe that they would do so again on that evening with likely danger to themselves, plaintiffs' justly contend that defendant’s- liability for the accident which happened was thereby established.

In Fitzpatrick v. Penfield, 267 Pa. 564, 109 A. 653, a wall which had been left standing in a weakened condition after a fire fell upon and killed three boys, who, with other children, had been in the habit of playing around in the yard immediately adjoining the wall. Although a new trial was granted the defendant for other reasons, it was there decided that the owner of the building of which the wall had formed a part could be held liable in damages for the accident if negligence in regard to the proper maintenance of the wall in a safe condition was-proved. That case differs in several respects from'this one'but in many of its features is not dissimilar, and it throws at least some light upon the legal'problems here involved. While there it was the owner of the property who was charged with responsi *265

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.2d 861, 360 Pa. 259, 1948 Pa. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-palley-manufacturing-co-pa-1948.