Reichvalder v. Borough of Taylor

181 A. 864, 120 Pa. Super. 217, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 141
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 10, 1935
DocketAppeal, 60
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 A. 864 (Reichvalder v. Borough of Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reichvalder v. Borough of Taylor, 181 A. 864, 120 Pa. Super. 217, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 141 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, J.,

This is a suit brought by a minor through his mother and next friend and by his mother in her own right to recover damages for injuries which the minor received while playing upon a road scraper owned by the defendant borough. The jury rendered verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendant’s motion for judgment non obstante veredicto was sustained, and final judgment entered for the defendant. The plaintiffs appealed.

The facts as disclosed by the testimony were substantially as follows: On October 19, 1932, at about 7:30 P. M., the minor plaintiff, then about seven years of age, was playing with a number of other children on and about the defendant’s road scraper which was parked for the night on a large vacant lot, belonging to the Glen Alden Coal Company, near Third and Oak Streets, in the Borough of Taylor, Lackawanna County. The scraper had been used during the day by the employees of the defendant borough on the borough streets. The testimony as to the exact location of the scraper at the time of the accident was conflicting. One of the plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that the scraper stood about eighteen feet from the roadway of Oak Street, while the defendant’s witnesses said it was at least fifty feet off Oak Street and about eighty feet from Third Street.

The scraper was one of the usual type used in grading roads and streets. It consisted of a heavy iron framework suspended .on four wheels, with a large blade *220 in the center. This blade, which did the actual scraping when the machine was in use, was raised and lowered by means of two iron flywheels. The turning of these flywheels operated certain cogs, which in turn ran on a shaft, and elevated or lowered the blade. There was a lever of spring steel which controlled each of the two flywheels. It was necessary to release these levers before the flywheels wonld move after the blade had been raised. When the blade was raised and these springs or levers released, the blade would fall of its own weight and spin the flywheels, unless they were held.

As some of the children were playing on the scraper that evening, raising and lowering the blade, the plaintiff’s left hand was caught in the cogwheels, resulting in a compound fracture of the hand and a dislocation of three of the fingers. The plaintiff’s older brother, who was about twelve years of age, heard the plaintiff’s cries, and turned the flywheel in the opposite direction and released him. Although the fracture healed, the plaintiff had not at the time of the trial regained the use of these fingers.

The children, in playing with this machine, turned the wheels, raised the blade, and then stepped on the lever; thereupon the blade would go down, the flywheels would spin and the cogwheels move on the shaft.

The defendant’s employees placed the scraper on the vacant lot, on the day in question, after working in the vicinity of Third and Oak Streets, and left it with the blade lowered. While using the machine on these streets that day, many children would follow it up and down the streets. The defendant’s employees, after placing the machine on the vacant lot at the conclusion of the day’s work, did not fasten the flywheels so that it would be impossible for children to raise and lower the blade or operate its mechanism. The flywheels *221 could have been tied with a rope so that they could not have been moved.

The only testimony that the piece of ground where the machine was placed was used as a playground was that of some of the children who testified at the trial. They testified that they played there. It does appear, however, that directly across the street the land was used as a playground, as there was a baseball diamond there. One of defendant’s witnesses testified as follows: “Q. This particular spot where the tractor was left was, I suppose, in your opinion the most suitable spot and you left it there? A. That was the only place we could leave it; there is no other empty space there. Q. There was empty space in that vicinity? A. There were playgrounds.”

The plaintiffs alleged that the defendant was negligent: “d. In permitting a machine, to wit: the said road scraper, which was attractive to children of tender age and dangerous to them, to remain unattended, unguarded and unlocked at or near Oak Street, a road used for travel in the said Borough of Taylor, and on a plot of ground or open field used as a play ground.”

The questions before us are whether, under the foregoing facts, there was any evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant, and, if so, whether its negligence was the proximate cause of the minor plaintiff’s injuries.

The appellee raises an additional question as to whether there could be any recovery by the plaintiffs for the reason that the alleged negligence of the defendant or its employees occurred in the exercise of a governmental function. As to this it is sufficient to say no such question was raised in the lower court either at the trial or on the motion for a new trial; hence it cannot be considered here. McLaughlin et ux. v. Monaghan, 290 Pa. 74, 138 A. 79.

The defendant, through its employees, had knowledge *222 of the attractiveness of the road scraper to the children. As the scraper was being operated by the employees of the defendant, the children would follow it up and down the streets in their neighborhood and in the vicinity of which the machine was placed at night. Under the circumstances, the defendant, through its employees, should have known that the children would, at the first opportunity, attempt to get on it, to play with it, and to try out the unfastened mechanism. The defendant ought to have anticipated that children would be playing in that vicinity, and, in so doing, be attracted to this machine placed upon the vacant lot, which was at least adjacent to, if not a part of, their recognized playgrounds. The defendant should also have known that, when it placed the scraper, at the end of the day, on this vacant lot just off of two streets of the borough, it would be used by the children in the course of their play, and that, owing to its unguarded condition, it would be dangerous to them when so engaged. This machine was knowingly placed by the defendant in the vicinity of the playground of children, who had manifested their interests in it during its operation throughout the day, and immediately adjacent to public highways. It was the duty of the defendant to have regard to the reckless and thoughtless tastes and traits of childhood. Kreiner v. Straubmuller, 30 Pa. Superior Ct. 609.

If this machine might become dangerous if a child chanced to set it in motion while playing with it, there was a duty on the defendant to take such precaution as was reasonable, under the circumstances, to prevent injury by it. Guilmartin v. Philadelphia, 201 Pa. 518, 51 A. 312. “Circumstances may beget duties which would not ordinarily be implied, and when they are shown to exist the questions arising are questions of fact, not of law: Schilling v. Abernethy, 112 Pa. 437”: Kreiner v. Straubmuller, supra, 30 Pa. Superior Ct. *223 609, page 612.

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Bluebook (online)
181 A. 864, 120 Pa. Super. 217, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reichvalder-v-borough-of-taylor-pasuperct-1935.