Rickard v. City of Reno

288 P.2d 209, 71 Nev. 266, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 90
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1955
Docket3859
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 288 P.2d 209 (Rickard v. City of Reno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rickard v. City of Reno, 288 P.2d 209, 71 Nev. 266, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 90 (Neb. 1955).

Opinion

*267 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

Appellant, Adele Olga Rickard, plaintiff below, sued the City of Reno and the other respondents for damages for personal injuries resulting from a fall on the sidewalk in the City of Reno. At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendant city moved for a dismissal on the ground that plaintiff had failed to prove a sufficient case for the court or jury. Rule 41(b) N.R.C.P. The court granted the motion and dismissed the jury, holding that plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law. Appellant contends that the minds of reasonable men could well differ as to her contributory negligence and that it was error to take from the jury the determination of such issue of fact. Respondents, relying upon the rule that if the judgment was correct on any ground, it should be affirmed even if the ground stated by the court is insufficient (Richards v. Vermilyea, 42 Nev. 294, 175 P. 188, 180 P. 121), contend (1) that plaintiff failed to show any negligence in the defendants; (2) that any defect in the sidewalk, shown by the evidence, was such a minor defect as to be trivial; (8) that the defendant was contributorily negligent as a matter of law; and (4) that even assuming defendants’ negligence in the maintenance of the sidewalk and lack of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, there is an entire lack of showing that plaintiff’s fall was caused by the condition of the sidewalk. All of these contentions were briefed and orally argued at great length by the respective parties. Our conclusion that there was an entire lack of proof that the condition of the sidewalk caused the plaintiff’s fall makes it unnecessary for us to consider the other contentions, interesting and important as they are. Under the facts surrounding the plaintiff’s fall and the lack of proof as to what caused it, we simply do not reach the other phases of the case.

*268 The plaintiff, a woman of the age of sixty-four years, enjoying good health and good vision, was walking northward on the west side of Virginia Street, a busy street in the business district of Reno, on the east side of the sidewalk. She was walking at a moderate pace and wearing common-sense walking shoes. The sidewalk was thirteen feet ten inches from the building line to the curb and she was walking approximately four feet in from the curb. The time was about 10: 30 in the morning, the day was clear, the temperature mild. People were approaching her from the north, but no one was directly in front of her as she proceeded northward. She fell at a point where there was upon the sidewalk what is referred to throughout the testimony as “a depression” or “a slight depression.” She and her witnesses had passed over the spot many times before. There is no indication that any other person had ever fallen there. Her theory is that her fall was caused by her stepping into this depression, combined with the circumstance that a recent street flushing operation resulted in a deposit of material within the depression, both of which circumstances, or either of them, resulting from the defendants’ negligence, caused her to fall. Before analyzing the proof or lack of proof as to what caused the plaintiff’s fall, it becomes necessary to describe the condition of the sidewalk.

As to this there is virtually no conflict in the testimony of the witnesses. The depression was generally circular in form, possibly four or five to six feet in diameter. From the watermarks or water stains on the cement plaintiff thought it was about six feet in diameter and sloping to a maximum depth of one inch approximately in the center. Although in answer to a question as to whether the depression was abrupt or gradual, she answered, “Well, it is really abrupt,” her further description and the description given by her witnesses indicate rather conclusively that the slope from the perimeter to the one inch depth in the center was a gradual *269 one. When describing the point just within the circumference of the depression where plaintiff put her foot when she fell, with reference to the extent of the slope or difference in elevation, plaintiff’s witness Gulling was asked: “Well, do you think it was a quarter of an inch lower, or half an inch, or what?” He replied, “No, I wouldn’t say it was a quarter of an inch, no * * * might be less than that.” Thus the incline was one inch in three feet. A yardstick raised one inch at one end, indicates the slope. There was also a gradual slope of the sidewalk from the property line to the curb. There remained three or four feet of level sidewalk between the westerly extremity of the depression and the property line. Where the easterly limit of the depression approached the curb, the curb had been lowered till it was almost flush with the sidewalk. A few feet to the north and south of this point, however, the curb was four or five inches high. Earlier street flushing operations that day had resulted in flushing the water from the gutter into the depression. As to the deposit left by the flushing operation, plaintiff testified: “I saw a depression and I saw moisture. * * * I saw a dirty looking sidewalk. It’s difficult to explain. It just didn’t look clean, but it didn’t look dangerous, either. * * * I noticed water — where water had been. However, there wasn’t any water there at the time. The drainage was good. The sidewalk was dirty, this portion of it, silt, black slime or dark.” On cross examination when her attention was called to her description of “black slime or dark,” she replied: “Just a dirty looking sidewalk there, nothing that looked dangerous. I noticed a little bit of it as I approached.” On redirect in answer to the question, “How did you know the sidewalk was dirty?”, she replied, “When I got up from the fall I had a black substance on my coat and I also had something on the inside of my right shoe.” When asked, “Did you see any grease or silt right there when you fell?”, she replied, “I wouldn’t know what was on there *270 any more than it looked like, as I say, I took and flirt a mop. It has that damp look. Not wet, runny wet, but just moist, but nothing to fear”; that sand or dirt on the sidewalk was not of any great degree; that “if there was anything there it was adhering so closely” it did not look dangerous. Plaintiff’s witness Gulling said: “The circumference of this depression looked scummy and greasy. * * * like the greasy ring in a bathtub.” Her witness Sinelio noticed “a very slight dampness.” Her witness Browne “thought it was more black and slimy. I’d say it was muddy, black mud.”

We turn then to a consideration of what happened as plaintiff approached this depression and fell. The plaintiff herself, one witness who was walking behind her and one witness who was approaching her from the north are the only three persons who testified as to what happened. Plaintiff testified: “I fell forward. * * * My feet went out from under me and I fell flat on my nose. I had a sensation of shock.” On cross examination she affirmed the testimony given in her deposition taken by defendant, when she was asked: “Q. Well, do you know what happened? A. No, sir, it just happened like that. I was on my feet and just walking along at a conservative pace, and suddenly I was — I hit the sidewalk.

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Bluebook (online)
288 P.2d 209, 71 Nev. 266, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickard-v-city-of-reno-nev-1955.