Shuptrine v. Herron

180 So. 620, 182 Miss. 315
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1938
DocketNo. 33107.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 So. 620 (Shuptrine v. Herron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shuptrine v. Herron, 180 So. 620, 182 Miss. 315 (Mich. 1938).

Opinions

*325 Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, at the time of the injury herein complained of, was a resident of the village of Courtland, her residence being immediately on the east side of state highway No. 51. Appellants were contractors in the permanent construction of said state highway. Under their contract with the State Highway Department and in accord with the specifications therein contained, the contractors were required to lower the grade of the highway in front of the residence of appellee, so that at a point 13 feet from her front yard steps a cut was made about 5 feet deep. The contract was performed in this respect precisely according to said specifications.

There was only one other residence in the village on the east side of the highway, and that was to the northward of that of appellee, hut on that side also, and to the northward of appellee’s residence there was the village schoolhouse. The main portion of the village was on the other or west side of the highway. There was a residence on the west side, almost opposite the residence of appellee but somewhat to the northward. It had been the custom, particularly in going from the village to the schoolhouse, that the children and others, or some of them, would proceed to a point on the west side of the highway, opposite appellee’s residence, then eastwardly across the gravelled highway 51, as then situated, to a point directly or almost directly in front of appellee’s residence, and thence to the schoolhouse; and those going from the schoolhouse to the village would follow the same course in the reverse. This was the course that appellee would take in going to the village.

At a point opposite the residence of appellee, the new highway was constructed so as to run straight north and south, and this required the new highway going north to depart at that point to the westward of the old highway, inasmuch as the old highway curved to the *326 eastward there. As the contractors cut down the grade for the new highway, they at the same time cut down the grade in the old highway so as to induct it into the new highway at the point of divergence on the same grade as that of the new highway; and this point of juncture was at or near the northeast corner of appellee’s yard. This made it so that those going along the old highway from or to the schoolhouse would and did follow the old highway as regraded and thence into the new highway as graded and would and did no longer go to a point directly opposite appellee’s residence; and it left the rim of the cut of the new highway 13 feet from and west of, the front yard steps of appellee’s residence, the cut at that point being about 5 feet deep, as already mentioned. Further of what was done will be later mentioned.

About a month or six weeks after all this had been done, appellee was awakened at night by an alarm of fire, the fire being in the residence of a near relative, and in her excitement, and as she says in a moment of forgetfulness of the change that had been made, although she knew fully of all that had been done, appellee ran out of her yard and into the cut and was severely injured. She sued the contractors and recovered judgment on the theory that the contractors should have erected a barrier at the cut in front of her residence, in view of the previous custom to cross the highway on foot at or about that point.

Appellants contend that, inasmuch as they did the work for the State Highway Department and in strict accordance with the specifications prescribed by the state, they are entitled to the same immunity which belongs to the state itself. Without pausing to consider that question, or the other questions raised, we will proceed at once as if the work was being done for a railroad company or for a municipal corporation, this being the most favorable view that could be taken in appellee’s behalf.

*327 There are hundreds of thousands of miles of railroads and other public highways in this country which pass through hills and where deep cuts below the original surface of. the ground have been necessary. There are hundreds of thousands of such cuts in this state and thousands within municipalities. It has never been supposed that railroads or others who construct or maintain public highways are under any duty to fence or barricade these cuts so as to prevent persons or animals from falling therein from abutting property. No such duty exists at common law and no statute in this state requires it. The rule is so stated in 2 Beach, Pub. C'orp. section 1228: “It is not the duty of a city to provide means of access from private property to its streets, nor is it liable for failure to guard its streets from approach at points where such approach is dangerous. A city is under no legal obligation to provide danger signals along an excavation in a public street as to one travelling outside the street, or except at the crossings- or intersection of such street by other streets or highways.” Municipalities are not required at the expense of taxpayers to provide special means of approach or access to its streets opposite the residence of every abutting property owner. Such individual entrances must be provided'and constructed by the owner himself. The leading case on this particular subject is Metcalf v. Boston, 158 Mass. 284, 285, 33 N. E. 586.

Where, however, a railroad or a municipality or other responsible party makes a cut across another highway, or across a well-defined and generally used roadway, whether public or private, or even across a pathway so commonly used and so well defined as to amount to a roadway, the corporation or person who makes the cut (1) shall display lights or erect barriers, or else (2) shall make a safe entrance from the intersected road or pathway, at the point of intersection or so near thereto or in such manner as that those who formerly used the *328 intersected or interrupted roadway or well-defined path, or any other traveler, will readily see and unmistakably know that they are to use the new way instead of the old. And the same rule applies to an abandoned public highway, when it is left in such condition as would likely mislead persons of ordinary prudence into supposing that it is still open to use. De Long v. Oklahoma City, 47 Old. 398, 148 P. 701, L. R. A. 1915E, 597; O’Malley v. Parsons, 191 Pa. 612, 43 A. 384, 71 Am. St. Rep. 778; City of Omaha v. Randolph, 30 Neb. 699, 46 N. W. 1013; Burnham v. Boston, 10 Allen 290, 295, 92 Mass. 290, 295; Dennis v. Elmira Heights, 59 App. Div. 404, 70 N. Y. S. 312; Mulvane v. South Topeka, 45 Kan. 45, 25 P. 217, 23 Am. St. Rep. 706; Elliott v. Mason, 76 N. H. 229, 81 A. 701, 37 L. R. A., (N. S.), 357; Clark v. Richmond, 83 Va 355, 5 S. E. 369, 5 Am. St. Rep. 281; Griffin v. Chillicothe, 311 Mo. 648, 279 S. W. 84, 42 A. L. R. 1273; Orme v. Richmond, 79 Va. 86. Compare Young v. District of Columbia, 3 MacArthur 137, 10 D. C. 137; City of McCook v. Parsons, 77 Neb. 132, 108 N. W. 167; Goodin v. Des Moines, 55 Iowa 67, 7 N. W. 411; City of Chicago v. McKenna, 114 Ill. App. 270; Calhoun v. Milan, 64 Mo. App. 398; Kirkham v. Kansas City, 89 Kan. 651, 132 P. 160; Morgan v. Hallowell, 57 Me. 375; and see particularly Compton v. Revere, 179 Mass. 413, 60 N. E. 931; Ivester v. Atlanta, 115 Ga. 853, 42 S. E. 220; also 7 McQuillan on Municipal Corporations, section 2990, pp. 213, 214, and 43 C.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 620, 182 Miss. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shuptrine-v-herron-miss-1938.