Salevan v. Wilmington Park, Inc.

72 A.2d 239, 45 Del. 290, 6 Terry 290, 16 A.L.R. 2d 1450, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 133
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 21, 1950
Docket382
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 A.2d 239 (Salevan v. Wilmington Park, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salevan v. Wilmington Park, Inc., 72 A.2d 239, 45 Del. 290, 6 Terry 290, 16 A.L.R. 2d 1450, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 133 (Del. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Wolcott, Judge.

The plaintiff brings suit for personal injuries received when struck in the back by a baseball while walking on East Thirtieth Street in the City of Wilmington, past the ball park of the defendant.

The defendant is the owner of land at the southwest corner of the intersection of Thirtieth Street and Governor Printz Bbúle-.vard in the City of Wilmington on which is located the ball park in question. The business of the defendant is the maintenance and renting of the ball park and its facilities, and has been carried on by the defendant for over eight years.

The defendant leases the facilities of its park to ball clubs and, in particular, leases the facilities as its home field to the Wilmington Blue Rocks, a member team of the Inter-State League. When-the Wilmington Blue Rocks are not playing at their home field, the defendant leases the facilities of the park for other athletic exhibitions and, on the night when the injury took place, the park was leased for a game being played between two Negro professional teams from Philadelphia.

*292 The park of the defendant is laid out so that the left field foul line runs parallel to Thirtieth Street approximately 160 feet'from that street. Parallel to the left field foul line and to Thirtieth Street is a fence which is 40 feet from the sidewalk running along the southerly side of Thirtieth Street. The grandstand behind the home plate and extending along the foul line between home plate and third base is 40 feet in height with a wire screen erected on its top 10 feet in height. At the easterly end of the grandstand are 20-foot high bleacher stands running parallel to the left field foul line and along the left field fence. Commencing at the end of the bleachers, the fence running parallel to Thirtieth Street is 10 feet in height. The distance from home plate to the beginning of the 10-foot fence is approximately 150 feet.

On the night in question, the plaintiff was walking on the sidewalk on the southerly side of Thirtieth Street in an easterly direction with her daughter-in-law and grandson, aged 10 years. When she reached a point on the sidewalk roughly opposite the point where the bleachers end and the 10-foot fence begins, she was struck in the back by a baseball. The plaintiff testified that she did not see the'ball before it struck her. The plaintiff’s daughter-in-law, who was walking with the plaintiff holding her right arm, testified that she did not see the ball prior to the time it struck the plaintiff but that, immediately after the plaintiff was struck, she heard the announcer over the loud speaker system within the park announce, “Foul ball.” The plaintiff’s grandson testified that he was walking on the right of the plaintiff’s daughter-in-law and saw the ball which struck the plaintiff come over the bleachers out of the ball park. The defendant did not seriously contest this testimony, and I am satisfied that the plaintiff was struck by a fast-moving baseball which came over the fence out of the ball park.

The plaintiff called as witnesses a radio sports announcer, a *293 newspaper sports reporter and a young boy who had many times waitéd on Thirtieth Street for baseballs to come over the fence of the defendant’s park. From the testimony of these witnesses, which is not substantially contradicted by the defendant, it appears that in the course of an average ball game, 16 to 18 foul balls come from inside the park into Thirtieth Street and, of them, an average of 2 or 3 foul balls come from within the park over the 10-foot fence and into the area along Thirtieth Street through which the plaintiff was passing at the time of the injury. The manager of the defendant testified that, on an average, 68 baseball games were played at Wilmington Park during the baseball season.

The plaintiff does not contend that the defendant is an insurer of persons lawfully using the highways and sidewalks adjacent to its ball park, but does contend that the defendant, as a landowner, has the duty to exercise reasonable care in the use of its land so as to prevent injury to travelers lawfully using the highways adjacent thereto. The plaintiff contends that the defendant had notice of the passage of baseballs outside of its park into East Thirtieth Street to the danger of persons using that public street, and that the failure of the defendant to take reasonable precautions to safeguard the public was negligence.

The defendant, on the other hand, contends that the plaintiff has wholly failed to establish any negligence; that the defendant had no notice of baseballs passing over the fence in question, and that the defendant had taken whatever precautions were necessary under the circumstances for the protection of the public.

It is clear that the public has a right to the free and unmolested use of the public highways, and that abutting landowners may not so use their land as to interfere with the rights of persons lawfully using the highways. Mills v. Wilmington City Railway Co., 1 Marv. 269, 40 A. 1114; Philadelphia & R. Railway Co. v. Dillon, 1 W. W. Harr. 247, 114 A. 62, 15 A. L. R. 894.

*294 Considering the extent to which the game of baseball is played in this country, the reported decisions of injuries caused by baseballs which have been hit out of baseball parks and which strike passers-by on the highways are surprisingly few. Seven cases have been called to my attention and no others have come to view, in which liability^ was sought to be imposed on the landowner. It is necessary to review them briefly.

Louisville Baseball Club v. Hill, 291 Ky. 333, 164 S. W. 2d. 398,-was a suit for an injury to an eleven year old boy struck in the face by a baseball coming over the fence from the defendant’s . park. The jury below returned a verdict for the plaintiff and, on appeal, this verdict was affirmed, although in the course of its opinion, the court stated that the doctrine of res ipso loquitur was applicable and that a verdict for the plaintiff should have been directed. The court said that the defendant owner of the baseball park, had notice that baseballs were often knocked over the particular fence in question and by reason of that knowledge, v\ as bound to anticipate that users of the highways might be injured. This being so, the court stated it was the duty of the defendant park owner to prevent the possibility of such accidents.

Jones v. Kane & Roach, Inc., 182 Misc. 37, 43 N. Y. S. 2d 140, was an action against the City of Syracuse for personal injuries to a pedestrian on a sidewalk running near the ball field on a city-owned park, who was struck in the face by a pitched: baseball. There were no barriers of any kind erected around the' ball field. The court found that the baseball diamond on the city-owned- -park was a well defined one; that the city had constructive notice that baseball games had been played thereon, and that base: balls .often came from the diamond into the highway. On this showing, the .case .was submitted to. the jury and a verdict, was. returned. for,.the plaintiff. .- • . . . . .

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Bluebook (online)
72 A.2d 239, 45 Del. 290, 6 Terry 290, 16 A.L.R. 2d 1450, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salevan-v-wilmington-park-inc-delsuperct-1950.