Smith v. BOEN-KOON & EGGE-CUMMINS CONSTRUCTION CO.

384 P.2d 283, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 146
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 8, 1963
Docket257
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 384 P.2d 283 (Smith v. BOEN-KOON & EGGE-CUMMINS CONSTRUCTION CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. BOEN-KOON & EGGE-CUMMINS CONSTRUCTION CO., 384 P.2d 283, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 146 (Ala. 1963).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

This is an action to recover damages for injuries to the plaintiff, alleged to have been caused by defendant’s negligence. The court, sitting without a jury, found the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence, and so gave judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff appeals.

At about 8:30 a. m., on September 13, 1960, the plaintiff, who was staying at the house of a married daughter on Ash Street, left the house by the front door with her husband and her daughter in the daughter’s car to drive to downtown Fairbanks. The day was partially cloudy and the ground was wet and muddy from the rains of several previous days. Ash Street was under construction at the time and the defendant was getting ready to pour the sidewalk on Ash Street and adjoining Kennicott Avenue; so the daughter had been parking her car in a sort of alleyway at the rear and to the west of the house. As the daughter’s house had no back entrance and her backyard was fenced in with a gateway only at1 the side, it was necessary either to go through the neighbor’s yard to get to the car or to take a more circuitous route along the unfinished sidewalk on Ash Street to Kennicott Avenue and then proceed westerly along Kennicott to the alleyway.

To avoid having to walk across the neighbors’ backyards through long grass and over muddy ground, the plaintiff took what she considered to be the safer route along the unfinished sidewalks. Her husband accompanied her, but the daughter took the shortcut after counseling the older folks to go by the longer way.

The defendant’s work had progressed to the point where the dirt had been compacted into a subsurface for the sidewalk along Ash Street and Kennicott Avenue. This subsurface was lined by two-by-four forms, set four feet apart, into which the concrete would be poured. Every twenty feet along the length of the forms there was a two- *284 by-four crosspiece or spreader. Inside the forms and about three-tenths of a foot (3.6 inches) from the form extending along the adjacent property lines was strung a green nylon cord which was on a level with the top surface of the forms and spreaders, was tied onto the spreaders, and was used to line up the forms. The cord was described as being a little larger than the lead in a pencil and of such strength that it could not be broken by hand. Steel pins, two and a half feet long, were used to straighten the forms wherever they were out of line due to warping of a two-by-four or some other cause. The pins were driven into the ground beside the form to a depth that left about eight to ten inches of the pin protruding above the form. There were no warning signs posted or watchmen 'stationed in the area and no barricades set up against use by the public of the subsurface within the forms as a sidewalk; although there were some barricades out in the streets.

After leaving the house on the morning in question, the plaintiff and her husband walked inside the sidewalk forms down Ash Street some 100 feet to its intersection with Kennicott Avenue, thence east on Kenni-cott for a distance of about ninety feet to a point which was twenty-five to thirty feet from the east end of the project. Here the plaintiff stepped out of the unfinished sidewalk into the adjoining backyard in order to cross over to her daughter’s car. In doing so she stepped over the two-by-four form at her right side with her right-foot and, according to her story, as she brought her left foot over this form “the toe of it caught in a tight green nylon cord which was placed just slightly inside the plank above the sidewalk about 8" -10" and which I [the plaintiff] was not able to see and which was not visible to me at any time until I saw it after I had tripped over.” The plaintiff fell hard to the ground and received the injuries for which she is seeking damages.

The record is silent as to the position or actions of the husband at the time the plaintiff tripped and fell, although the plaintiff stated that her husband saw her fall. The daughter testified that she saw her mother fall and rushed to her aid. She also stated that the object over which her mother tripped was a dark green cord not readily visible at the time. Robert Brooks, the field inspector for the City of Fairbanks on this paving project of the defendant company, testified as a witness for the plaintiff that on the evening before the accident he remembered that the nylon lines were left up after the workmen had quit for the day. So he returned to the project about 7:00' or 8:00 p. m. and pulled up the lines strung along Ash and Kennicott, except at the place of the accident where he did not see any line that evening. Not until the next morning, when the plaintiff’s daughter reported the accident to him and he went over to inspect the area did he see and tear up-that part of the cord over which the plaintiff had tripped about an hour earlier.

It is to be noted that the plaintiff, though sixty-nine years of age at the time of the-accident, had good eyesight and was an alert and physically active person. She first became cognizant in August, 1960, of the street and sidewalk construction work going on in the area of her daughter’s home and seems to have observed and become quite familiar with the details of the work being done by the defendant preparatory to the paving of the sidewalks on Ash and Kennicott.

Other facts worthy of note are these r The first person to whom plaintiff’s daughter reported the accident was the witness Brooks. She had known him and his family as acquaintances for several years and knew that he had something to do with the paving project on her streets. The plaintiff and her daughter both gave testimony, the plaintiff by deposition only, to the effect that the plaintiff had never been seriously ill before the accident. Testimony of her own doctors, on the other hand, disclosed that for a period of several years prior to the accident she had been treated for hypertension, arteriosclerosis, recurrent bouts of sinusitis *285 and respiratory infections and hypothyroidism, that she had had an arthritic condition of the spine for many years, and that just a month prior to her fall on Kennicott Avenue she had had a stroke involving temporary paralysis of one side of her body which required hospitalization. When asked whether the green nylon cord extended the full length of the sidewalk forms on Kenni-cott Avenue, the plaintiff’s daughter answered that she presumed it did, her testimony being as follows:

“Q. Do you know how far along the — the walk on Kennicott, it extended ? Did it go clear from the alleyway to the corner?

“A. I presume it went to the end of sidewalk, to the stake.

“Q. You mean to the — to the end of the sidewalk at Ash Street ?

“A. Well. I mean, well — where the curb went along toi [sic] — from corner to corner, I presume.

“Q. No further questions.

“A. I didn’t look at that.”

From the facts as we have related them above, the trial court found that the defendant was negligent in permitting the nylon cord to remain in place, unguarded, but denied the plaintiff any recovery for her injuries because of contributory negligence on her part in failing to exercise reasonable care for her own safety.

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Bluebook (online)
384 P.2d 283, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-boen-koon-egge-cummins-construction-co-alaska-1963.