Puckett v. City of Louisville

116 S.W.2d 627, 273 Ky. 349, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 627
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 29, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 116 S.W.2d 627 (Puckett v. City of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Puckett v. City of Louisville, 116 S.W.2d 627, 273 Ky. 349, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 627 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Affirming.

At the time of sustaining the injuries to recover damages for which the plaintiff, Thelma Puckett, filed this action against the City of L.ouisville in the Jefferson circuit court, she was eleven years and four months, old — the action being filed on September 30, 1935, by her mother, Mrs. Mae Bailey, as her next friend. Mrs. Bailey, with whom Thelma, her child by her first husband, was residing, lived in a different part of the city from a Mrs. Jackson, who resided in the extreme southern or southeastern portion of the corporate limits of the city and south of the southern railway tracks. The lot upon which Mrs. Jackson resided abutted on the south side of the north portion of Bowman avenue, which was then -being constructed by the city. Paralleling that avenue on the south, and 280 feet distant, is a new street now known as Crittenden drive. Some years-before the involved accident the space between those two streets was platted and subdivided, but it thereafter remained in its natural state without any street marks, lines, or other improvements. One of the lots abutting on the north side of Crittenden drive was numbered 1367, and it had been acquired by the city under a sale of it for city taxes. The soil in the subdivision, including that of lot 1367, was of a clammy sandy substance, and persons needing that quality of' sand had gone upon the lot and made some excavations therein in procuring sand; but whether that was with or without the permission and consent of the city, or the former owner of tbe lot, does not appear.

A Mrs. Spencer, with a young daughter, and a son about 14 years of age, was visiting Mrs. Jackson on the same day as Mrs. Bailey and Thelma Puckett — ■ they being her cousins. Mrs-. Jackson also had a young daughter, and some time during the day the children obtained from the home of Mrs. Jackson some spoons,, which young Spencer said they procured from her dining room. They left the Jackson residence with their spoons and a toy truck and began playing in the unfinished portion of Bowman avenue, which was about-one block south of the Jackson residence, and Jot No., *351 1367 owned by tbe city was about 100 yards east of tbe portion of Bowman avenue where the children first commenced playing. After a time they left Bowman avenue and crossed that 100-yard space to the lot owned by the city upon which were the excavations made by persons desiring sand. It appears that in extracting the sand it was not done regularly, and in some-portions of the lot peaks from some cause were left, although portions of the lot do not appear to have-been so explored at all. The proof shows that upon occasions prior thereto children of the neighborhood— particularly boys — would get in the excavation and play .what they described as “cowboys.'’ - ■

After the children arrived with their spoons at the indicated place, the plaintiff — with her 14 year old cousin, Yirble Spencer — began to dig at the base of a small perpendicular bluff, and finally excavated a place large enough for both of them to enter. The bluff or bank at that point was slightly nigher than the waist of an average sized man and came somewhere near the neck of Thelma Puckett, as she testified, when she was. standing upright on the bottom. After the children had been missed from the Jackson residence for some time,. Mrs. Bailey started to hunt for them and finally located them on the lot owned by the city. When she arrived, she saw the excavation that young Spencer and her daughter (plaintiff) had made, with both of them in it, and she made some exclamation about the possible danger to them in that position, and young' Spencer, according to the testimony, jumped out of the-hole that had been made with the spoons; but Thelma,, who was lying on her stomach, did not get out, and as. young Spencer emerged a lump of the soil and sand above the excavation fell upon Thelma and produced the injuries to recover for which the action was filed. It, of course, is based upon what is generally known as the “Attractive Nuisance” doctrine; but at the close of plaintiff’s testimony the court sustained defendant’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor, upon which judgment dismissing the petition was rendered, to reverse which plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Counsel for appellant cite in their brief filed in this court many domestic and some foreign cases wherein the doctrine was upheld and applied — all of which, involved machinery, rock piles, sand piles, or other structures and artificial conditions, all of which were. *352 either immediately adjacent to or upon streets easily accessible to children of immature years, and which were enticing and attractive to them. Such conditions also were potentially dangerous to undeveloped youthful minds as possessed by immature childhood and which they were liable to encounter in playing with, upon, or about them when left in the surroundings indicated. If in such conditions children of immature and unthoughtful age do play with the contrivance, or other situation, so artificially produced, and become injured while it or they are unguarded or unprotected, the law, out of a spirit of humanity, has extended a right of action to the injured infant against the one who produced the situation, and for a better name the contrivance or condition has been designated as an “Attractive Nuisance” and has acquired a fixed place in the law of negligence. The doctrine — with the necessary elements to create liability — is tersely treated in the text of 20 R. C. L. beginning on page 79 and extending to page 99, and being sections 70-86, both inclusive. The last section (86) says:.

“Like waters, pits-and excavations on land embody no dangers that are not readily apparent to everyone, even very young children. For this reason the proprietor is under no obligation, as' a rule, to fence or otherwise guard such places, and "he will not be liable for injuries to children who may have fallen therein. Nor is the landowner liable for injuries sustained by earth falling into excavations as a result of the embankment being undermined by children. Where, however, excavations are made in the highway, guards or barriers must be erected to protect passers from injury.”

An annotation in 19 L. R. A., N. S., on page 1152, dealing with the doctrine as it applies to excavations, is cited in support of that text. One of the cases in the annotation is that of Savannah F. & W. Railway Company v. Beavers, 113 Ga. 398, 39 S. E. 82, 54 L. R. A. 314, and which held: “That an excavation upon private land is attractive to children does not require the owner so to guard it as to prevent injury to children coming upon it without his invitation, express or implied.” Also there is cited in support of the same text the case of Magner v. Frankford Baptist Church, 174 Pa. 84, 34 A. 456, holding, in substance, as stated in the annotation, that “The owner of land is under no duty to *353 protect an infant trespasser who comes from the street across the land of another, from the possible danger of falling into a quarry on the land of a stranger.”

We had occasion to go quite extensively into the doctrine and to analyze and point out the facts in which it would be applied in the case of Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company v. Hutton, 220 Ky. 277, 295 S. W. 175, 53 A. L. R. 1328.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.2d 627, 273 Ky. 349, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puckett-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapphigh-1938.