Schadt v. Latchford

843 A.2d 689, 2004 Del. LEXIS 65, 2004 WL 243834
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 6, 2004
Docket232, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 843 A.2d 689 (Schadt v. Latchford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schadt v. Latchford, 843 A.2d 689, 2004 Del. LEXIS 65, 2004 WL 243834 (Del. 2004).

Opinion

STEELE, Justice:

The City of Wilmington enacted an ordinance that imposed upon private landowners holding property adjacent to the City’s public sidewalks a duty to repair and maintain abutting public sidewalks. The ordinance imposes sole responsibility for damages for a breach of that duty upon the private landowner. Plaintiff/Appellee successfully contended below that Defendants/Appellants property owners negligently breached their duty to keep the City owned sidewalks safe for pedestrians. A jury awarded her compensation for her personal injuries resulting from that breach. Defendants/Appellants property owners unsuccessfully challenged Wilmington City Council’s authority to enact the ordinance in Superior Court.

We conclude that because the Wilmington City Charter expressly mandates that the City of Wilmington repair and maintain City owned sidewalks adjacent to private property, the ordinance purporting to transfer that duty to private property owners is inconsistent with the express terms of the City Charter. We therefore find that the ordinance may not place a duty upon private property owners to maintain and repair City owned sidewalks for the safety of the general public. The Superior Court’s conclusion that the ordinance properly transferred the duty to adjacent private property owners is incorrect and must be reversed.

I

Facts

On September 25 1997, Jane Latchford and two co-workers took a “power walk” during their lunch hour. They often maintained a brisk pace and talked with each other as they walked. Latchford, who was walking a few steps ahead of her co-workers, noticed a difference in height between two sections of a City-owned sidewalk and attempted to step over it. She cleared the leading raised edge of the sidewalk with her left foot, but her right foot caught the top of the raised portion of the sidewalk. She tripped and fell, fracturing her left hip. The injury required multiple surgeries.

Frank and Margaret Schadt owned the property abutting the sidewalk upon which Latchford fell. The Schadts acknowledged the sidewalk’s imperfect condition. There was a cráck in one sidewalk section and two other adjoining sections had a height difference between them of to 1% inches.

Latchford filed suit against the Schadts in the Superior Court seeking damages. Specifically, Latchford argued that the Schadts failed to maintain properly the sidewalk abutting their property as 1 Wilm. C. § 42-42 required them to do. Before trial, the Schadts moved for summary judgment on the issue of the constitutionality of 1 Wilm. C. § 42-42. ' The trial judge denied the motion and held as a matter of law that through § 42-42 the City Council of Wilmington had validly transferred the City’s responsibility to maintain and repair public sidewalks to adjacent private property owners. 1 The Schadts moved for reargument or clarification of the trial judge’s order denying their motion for summary judgment. The trial judge granted the motion in order to more fully address the Schadts’ attack on the constitutionality of § 42-42. In an April 2001 Order the trial judge held that the *691 ordinance did not divest the City of the duty to repair and maintain sidewalks, but simply delegated that duty to property owners pursuant to a valid exercise of municipal home rule powers. 2 The case went to trial and a jury awarded Latchford $230,000.

We review questions of law de novo to determine if the trial judge erred. 3

II

The City of Wilmington’s Home Rule Charter

The City’s current home rule Charter, adopted by referendum on November 7, 1978 and effective on July 1, 1979, grants complete legislative and administrative power over municipal functions to the City of Wilmington. 4 The grant includes the power to enact ordinances necessary and proper for executing any of the City’s express or implied powers. 5 “The purpose of the home rule provisions was to enable municipalities to exercise the powers of the sovereign except as limited by either the State Constitution or State statute.” 6 Accordingly, a limit to Wilmington’s sovereignty is explicit in § 802:

Every municipal corporation in this State ... may, subject to the conditions and limitations imposed by this chapter, amend its charter so as to have and assume all powers which, under the Constitution of this State, it would be competent for the General Assembly to grant by specific enumeration and which are not denied by statute .... 7

Thus, the City enjoys complete powers of legislation and administration relating to its municipal functions, 8 but only within the scope of the powers conferred by the General Assembly through the City’s Charter. 9 Accordingly, Wilmington’s Charter “stands as its constitution,” 10 and amendments to that charter are subject to the procedures required by 22 Del. C. §§ 811-815. Specifically, charter amendments must be enacted by referendum or by an act of the General Assembly with approval of two-thirds of all members of each house. 11 In other words, ordinances enacted by the City Council:

*692 .. .must conform to, be subordinate to, not conflict with, and not exceed the charter, and can no more change or limit the effect of the charter than a legislative act can modify or supersede a provision of the constitution of the state. 12

Ill

1 Wilm C. §§ 5-400 and 42-42

1 Wilm. C. § 5-400 (the Wilmington City Charter) states, in relevant part:

The department of public works shall have the power and its duty shall be to perform the following functions:
(a) City streets, etc., generally. It shall itself, or by contract, design, construct, repair and maintain city streets, which shall include highways ... footways ... 13

1 Wilm. C. § 42-42 (the challenged ordinance) reads:

(a) Every sidewalk or footway between the curb stone and the building line, and every curb, along any of the public streets in the city, in front of lots whereon is erected any dwelling house, office, place of business, railing, fence, stone or brick wall, or permanent structure of any kind, or in front of such vacant lots as shall have been paved, shall at all times be kept in proper condition and free from obstruction and defective conditions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
843 A.2d 689, 2004 Del. LEXIS 65, 2004 WL 243834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schadt-v-latchford-del-2004.