Radford v. . Asheville

13 S.E.2d 256, 219 N.C. 185, 1941 N.C. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 26, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 S.E.2d 256 (Radford v. . Asheville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radford v. . Asheville, 13 S.E.2d 256, 219 N.C. 185, 1941 N.C. LEXIS 282 (N.C. 1941).

Opinion

This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for an injury sustained by him through the alleged negligence of the defendant in failing to keep a certain sidewalk in the city in good repair and safe for the use of pedestrians.

Under appropriate pleadings, evidence was introduced for the plaintiff and the defendant, the parts of which pertinent to this appeal may be summarized:

The plaintiff was walking on the sidewalk on Broadway Street in Asheville on the way to his rooming house. The sidewalk in question was immediately adjacent to the rooming house. The lower part of this building was occupied as a furniture store. Near the upper corner *Page 186 of the building, which the plaintiff was trying to reach, there was a coal chute near to and just above the door leading downstairs into the storeroom, which chute went under the floor of the building at an angle. The top of the chute was a metal leaf running out into the sidewalk about 18 inches from the wall and running up and down the sidewalk in an oblong shape. This door was designed to be opened up and turned back upon hinges, and when in a closed position formed a part of the sidewalk. The hinges were off, as well as the angle irons. The door was about 20 inches wide and 25 inches long and about a quarter of an inch thick. The hinges were all rusted off the butts. They were rusted down to the butts and wouldn't hold. There was a little lever on the bottom of it that worked back toward the street to keep the door from being raised from the outside. There had been angle irons under the covering. The angle irons were worn off clear down in the chute.

Plaintiff was uncertain whether he stepped on this door, but when he recovered consciousness he was lying on the sidewalk, with the door off to one side — the plaintiff on the left side down the street. Plaintiff's right leg was down in the coal chute, and his left elbow was fractured.

This occurred between nine and ten o'clock at night on the 12th of September. There were automobiles and trucks parked around the side, and the street light was around forty to eighty steps from the place. These lights did not shine in there and there were no other lights.

Plaintiff called to a Mr. Gilbert for help after he recovered consciousness. He did not know how long he had lain there, because in falling to the sidewalk he hit the left side of his head and was unconscious. The joint of the right elbow was fractured; plaintiff had it dressed three times and pus had come out of it. The left knee and left hip were bruised, the right leg skinned from the knee down, the right ankle sprained, and the shin on that side fractured. Later on a piece of bone was taken out from that leg in February and still later plaintiff got a piece of shivered bone out himself. Plaintiff testified that he suffered great pain and continued to suffer pain and inconvenience from the injury. Plaintiff further testified that he had been running a place of business in Asheville and making a good living out of it, but was not able to continue it and was compelled to sell it and had done no work since; not able to do any hard lifting or digging of any kind.

Plaintiff later had the coal chute measured. The print of his right foot was still there two weeks later and the coal chute in the same shape as when he got hurt, that is, the lid was.

Plaintiff then offered in evidence certain pieces of iron and wood gotten from the coal chute as explaining its condition. He exhibited one iron as lying where his foot hit the coal chute. *Page 187

Further describing the condition of the chute covering, plaintiff testified that there had been angle irons around four sides of the coal chute, fastened with rivets, but they had all rusted off, indicating one of these irons was off the lid. The angle irons were insufficient to hold the lid, which would slide when you stepped on it — move up and down the street, or "slide ever which way you stepped and pushed it."

The street at this point had a decided downward inclination northward.

Enough of the retaining parts of the lid had rusted off to cause it to slide when stepped upon, and the lower end would "rear up." Plaintiff further testified that after he had been hurt and the lid replaced on the hole that he could lie in his rooming house and hear a clang as people passed over it.

J. P. Ducker, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he knew the location of the coal chute, which was approximately eight or ten feet from the door of the place where he was working — the front door on the east side of Broadway and the west side of the building. The building was occupied by Mr. McClintock's woodworking place, refinishing, upholstering, etc. The second floor was apartments. The building had a brick front. The street was paved and was made of concrete, and the sidewalk was approximately five feet wide. At that point the street was down hill going northward.

Witness described the opening in the cover. He had seen it open as much as an inch and a half; had seen it slide down hill, and he had kicked on it a couple of times. That was before Mr. Radford fell. The cover looked like a thin piece of metal over it about a quarter of an inch in thickness and seemed to be warped or out of place.

Witness said that he had put the cover back on a couple of times before Mr. Radford fell. That he would not swear the exact date but did not believe it was so long before. He would put it something from a week to a year.

Witness testified that he called the attention of a city employee on a truck to the condition of this cover, saying: "Look at this thing; somebody is going to get hurt on it."

He testified that kids would go down there and jump up and down on it with both feet, back and forth, making a racket on the chute cover, and that you could hear it while people were walking on it. He had examined the supports at the time Mr. Radford was hurt. The rivets were supposed to keep it from slipping off, but they had rusted off, and you could take your hand and take it off, or you could jump up and down on it, and it would slide off. It was supposed to have a groove around it to keep it in place, but it was not sufficient. In going down hill, if you stepped on one end of it, it would raise the other, if you *Page 188 stepped on it hard, it would slide. When sliding it would leave an opening on the upper side of a quarter of an inch to two and a half inches. The hole from the top to the bottom of the chute was about eight feet.

The lid was a piece of metal a little longer than wide, about a quarter of an inch thick, had cleats on it, but they had been broken off or rusted, the ends were still there. It was warped and the sidewalk is not level and when you step on it it slips. Witness had seen the top of the coal chute off two or three times and had been working there several months; had seen children jumping up and down on the coal chute at least 25 times; saw none of them fall in.

R. Lee Gilbert, witness for the plaintiff, testified that he roomed in the apartment building near the place of the accident, heard Mr. Radford calling for help, went down and saw that he was "down in the place in the sidewalk," the place where they put coal in the basement. Where the coal chute breaks the sidewalk to go under the building the depth underneath was about two feet. The lid had slid down the street, moved off its regular place, where it set down and slid down to the right and Mr. Radford was down in that place. It seemed to have slid about a foot.

Plaintiff told this witness that he did not know how long he had been there, that it "knocked him out when he fell."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.E.2d 256, 219 N.C. 185, 1941 N.C. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radford-v-asheville-nc-1941.