Stevens Et Ux. v. Pittsburgh

194 A. 563, 129 Pa. Super. 5, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 292
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 28, 1937
DocketAppeal, 95
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 194 A. 563 (Stevens Et Ux. v. Pittsburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens Et Ux. v. Pittsburgh, 194 A. 563, 129 Pa. Super. 5, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 292 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Plaintiffs’ eight year old son, George Stevens, was accidentally shot and killed on Tuesday, April 22, 1930, about one o’clock in the afternoon. The bullet came from Olympia Park, an open, wooded, eighteen-acre park, owned, maintained and controlled by the City of Pittsburgh; its management and operation were *8 supervised by a force of city employees under the direction of a foreman. The park is bounded upon one side by Hallock Street, a public thoroughfare of the municipality. Upon the opposite side of this street are a number of private residences in one of which plaintiffs resided. At the time of the accident, the boy was standing near his home on a neighbor’s lawn which faced, and was directly opposite, the park.

Contending that the city owed their son, in the status he then occupied, the duty of exercising reasonable care to protect him from injury at the hands of its invitees and permittees then present in its park and that it had failed in the performance of that duty, plaintiffs brought an action in trespass against the municipality. The trial resulted in a verdict in their favor for $2,259.72, but the court below granted the city’s motion for judgment n. o. v.; the present appeal is by the plaintiffs from that judgment.

In addition to the facts already stated, these material, and practically uncontroverted, facts appear from the record: . The fatal shot was fired from a 22 caliber rifle by an older boy, Henry Uccelino, who stood under or near the bathhouse in the park and shot at a tree stump. He subsequently disappeared. The bullet either missed the stump or was deflected and struck and instantly killed appellants’ son. A rifle club had obtained a permit from the city and established a range in a certain well defined area in this park. This range was used only on Saturday afternoons by members of the club, and then under supervision of the club secretary. The shot which killed appellants’ son did not come from the rifle range but from a point near the bathhouse, some seventy-five to one hundred feet distant. At the time of the shooting the employees of the city were in attendance in the park.

The testimony, when read in the light most favorable to appellants, shows at least constructive notice to the *9 city of long continued, promiscuous and general shooting in the park by persons who were not members of the rifle club, but were in the park with the city’s knowledge and upon its implied invitation and permission to use the recreation facilities the park was intended to afford. Mrs. Shreflar, one of appellants’ witnesses who, like them, lived across the street from the park, testified that shooting had been going on, almost daily, in this park for a period of from seven to eight years; that it continued all through the year as well as in the hunting season; and that there were four or five attendants and a foreman employed in the park. This witness had caused the arrest of a young man two months before the fatal accident because he shot promiscuously in the park. On another occasion she saw two men shooting “right down through the park.” Mrs. Dorothy Staub, who lived nearby, said she heard shooting going on in the park almost every day during the year she lived there previous to the accident. Another of appellants’ witnesses, who also lived on a street facing the park, stated she had often heard shots in the park and had seen men going into it with guns; that this condition existed during the entire two years she lived there and occurred on other days than Saturdays and while attendants were present working in the park. Martin Silzander, who was with the Stevens boy just before he was shot, testified he saw people shooting in the park about three times a week for a period of a year previous to the accident and that this took place in the presence of four or five attendants who worked in the park. Complaints were made to the secretary of the rifle club about shooting in the park on days other than Saturday. He testified the city had a foreman who stayed in the park and several workmen who labored there daily. For about a half hour immediately preceding the accident the Uccelino boy and some of his companions had been shooting in *10 the direction of the bathhouse. The bullets whizzed through the trees over the heads of two young women who were picking flowers there. All this went on in the presence of park attendants.

The trial judge, Gray, J., in an opinion written for a majority of the court below and filed May 22, 1935, reviewed a number of cases and reached the conclusion that the city was entitled to a judgment in its favor, n. o. v., because the only negligence charged, or shown, had no relation “to the physical condition of Olympia Park, its equipment, or the ordinary use thereof,” but at most consisted in the neglect of the city to so police its park “as to keep order there and prevent such an act as took place.” If the city in maintaining and operating this park was acting in its governmental capacity, the conclusion that it is not liable for the failure of its servants to police it properly would be sound. Up to the time the court below decided this case our Supreme Court had not definitely considered and determined the capacity in which a municipality acts in acquiring, maintaining, and regulating the use of, its parks and playgrounds, or the nature and extent of its duty to control the conduct of visitors thereto.

If there had been no further authoritative pronouncement upon the subject in the meantime we would have been inclined to affirm the judgment. Subsequent, however, to the date of the decision of the court below, our Supreme Court handed down an opinion in the case of Honaman v. Philadelphia, 322 Pa. 535, 185 A. 750, reversing the judgment of this court (121 Pa. Superior Ct. 262, 183 A. 446) and discussing the capacity in which a municipality acts in operating parks owned by it.

In the Honaman case the plaintiff was wheeling her baby in its coach on the brick pavement of a city street bordering a portion of Fairmount Park. A baseball game was in progress in the park and as she was passing *11 she was struck in the face and severely injured by a foul tip. The baseball diamond was so laid out that the catcher stood only eight or ten feet from the paved sidewalk, the pitcher throwing toward the street. Ball games had been played on this diamond for many years “but no backstops or screens were erected along the highway, though extensively travelled by pedestrians and other highway users.” There was evidence that in the course of games foul tips frequently came back over the sidewalk and into the street, sometimes striking persons or cars passing by, and the testimony showed ample notice to the city of this use of its property.

Plaintiff and her husband recovered verdicts in the trial court. Upon appeals by the city to this court we reversed the judgments entered upon the verdicts upon the ground that if the city was negligent, “it arose from a failure to perform a governmental duty,...... the accident, if it was a preventable one, came about from a failure of proper policing; and this is one of those risks of government against which the citizen has no redress.” An allocatur was allowed by the Supreme Court; the judgment entered by us in favor of the city was reversed and the judgments on the verdicts reinstated.

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Bluebook (online)
194 A. 563, 129 Pa. Super. 5, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-et-ux-v-pittsburgh-pasuperct-1937.