Stewart Et Vir v. Pittsburgh

43 A.2d 393, 157 Pa. Super. 347
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 24, 1945
DocketAppeals, 147 and 148
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 43 A.2d 393 (Stewart Et Vir 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
Stewart Et Vir v. Pittsburgh, 43 A.2d 393, 157 Pa. Super. 347 (Pa. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Reno, J.,

Appellants, husband and wife, brought trespass to recover damages for injuries resulting from a fall sustained by wife plaintiff upon a public stairway maintained by defendant. The verdicts were for plaintiffs, but the court below entered the judgments n. o. v., from which these appeals were taken, in the belief that the evidence demonstrated as a matter of law the contributory negligence of wife plaintiff, hereinafter called plaintiff. In view of the verdicts, the record must be considered in the light most favorable to appellants, and oral testimony adverse to the theory of liability will be rejected. McCann v. Philadelphia Fairfax Corp., 344 Pa. 636, 26 A. 2d 540; Weismiller v. Farrell, 153 Pa. Superior Ct. 366, 34 A. 2d 45.

At the place where the accident occurred, in the outskirts of the City of Pittsburgh, Bigelow Boulevard and Brereton Street run parallel to each other and are separated by an open, and rather steep, grassy slope upon which defendant maintained a set of wooden steps to provide pedestrians a means of access between Brereton Street and the Boulevard at the top of the hill. The lower end of the stairway was illuminated by a street light suspended twenty-two feet above the ground from a yard arm three and one-half to four feet long extending away from the stairs and mounted upon a pole set in the ground at a point even with, but six and one-half feet away from, the seventh step, on the right *349 side of one descending the stairway. The front half of the fourth step from the bottom had been completely missing for two months before the accident, and had been loose for two months before that, and although defendant’s maintenance department had been advised of the condition on three occasions by a resident of the neighborhood, nothing was done to correct it.

At nine-thirty in the evening of September 2, 1942, when the weather was clear, but after dark, plaintiff, with her two-year old child in her left arm, was proceeding down the stairs on her way to her home on Brereton Street. Although she had lived in the vicinity for a number of years, plaintiff had had no occasion to use the flight of steps since the Spring of 1942 and she had no knowledge of the defective tread. As she passed the seventh step the rays of the street light came from behind her and the shadow of her body was cast before her down the remaining stairs. Plaintiff was looking where she was going, but because her shadow distorted her visual impressions she did not observe the broken tread, and she fell on the fourth step, although immediately before her fall she saw what she “thought was the step” and “it looked like a regular step.” Plaintiff summarized the cause of her fall as follows: “Q. It wasn’t because the steps were dark? A. No, because the shadow was dark the light cast on. Q. Is this a fair way to state it: That you couldn’t see this missing tread not because the steps were dark but because your shadow obscured the missing step. Is that right? A. Yes. Q. Is that a fair way of saying it now? A. Yes.”

Defendant does not take the position that it was without fault in permitting the step to fall into a state of disrepair so as to endanger the safety of those lawfully upon it. Since the stairway was maintained for the convenience of the public at large, defendant was obliged to keep it in a reasonably safe condition so that pedestrians in the exercise of care could use it without *350 peril. Zieg v. Pittsburgh, 348 Pa. 155, 34 A. 2d 511; Dunkerton v. North Braddock Borough, 330 Pa. 89, 198 A. 677. That the city neglected to discharge its duty to remedy the broken tread well in advance of the accident is plain, as it had an abundance of actual and constructive notice of the dangerous situation and ignored it for an unreasonably long period of time after the obligation to make repairs arose. Heinz v. Pittsburgh, 137 Pa. Superior Ct. 603, 10 A. 2d 100; Beloud v. Sayre, 56 Pa. Superior Ct. 215. The sole argument in derogation of the verdict is the proposition that, as the stairway was otherwise sufficiently lighted, plaintiff is not excused from failing to observe the pitfall merely because her shadow made the defective step appear to be sound. With this contention we cannot agree, as it would, in effect, make plaintiff an insurer of her own safety, requiring her to be extraordinarily alert, where, on the contrary, the true measure by which her conduct is to be gauged rises no higher than that degree of caution employed by the ordinarily prudent person under like circumstances. Mullin v. Welsbach Street Lighting Co., 318 Pa. 552, 179 A. 71; Bruch v. Philadelphia, 181 Pa. 588, 37 A. 818; O’Brien v. Jeannette Borough, 128 Pa. Superior Ct. 443, 194 A. 314. Ordinarily, the question of a plaintiff’s contributory negligence is one for the jury; “it is only in a clear ease where the evidence i!s such that reasonably minded men c'an unite in the conclusion that a victim of an accident was negligent, that a court is justified in declaring him so. See McCracken v. Curwensville Borough, 309 Pa. 98, 114, 115, 163 A. 217, and Rowland v. Canuso, 329 Pa. 72, 196 A. 823”: Douville v. Northeastern Warehouse Co., 337 Pa. 188, 190, 10 A. 2d 394. We think that from plaintiff’s description of her manner of descending the stairway it was not so “clear, as to leave no doubt,” that she was culpably responsible in part for her misfortune. Brinkos v. McKeesport City, 136 Pa. Superior Ct. 526, 531, 7 A. 2d 516.

*351 While the cases relied upon by defendant make the question a difficult one, a careful examination of them will reveal that each is distinguishable on its facts and that none is controlling here. In Lewis v. Duquesne Inclined Plane Co., 346 Pa. 43, 44, 28 A. 2d 925, plaintiff tripped while alighting from an inclined plane car which had stopped with its floor three inches below the level of the station platform, and she claimed that she was prevented by shadows from seeing the obstruction in her path. In holding her to have been contributorily negligent as a matter of law, the Supreme Court said: “It is obvious she could have seen this condition if she had looked.” Here, it was the very act of looking at the dangerous tread upon which she was about to step which deceived plaintiff into believing it was safe to proceed, as the play of her shadow on the stair made that which was defective appear to be in a satisfactory condition.

The plaintiff in Mammana v. Easton National Bank, 338 Pa. 225, 226, 12 A. 2d 918, ascended a flight of steps, of which the one next to the landing at the bottom, though adequately lighted and not defective, was obscured by a shadow. Upon descending twenty-five minutes later, he did not see the last stair and fell while attempting to step onto the landing. The Supreme Court, in addition to intimating that no negligence had been proved, affirmed a judgment entered on binding instructions for defendant with the comment: “...... as plaintiff such a short time before had ascended the stairs, he should have known the condition and, exercising due care, have observed where he was stepping.” This plaintiff had not used the stairway for nearly six months and was not familiar with its condition at the time she was injured.

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43 A.2d 393, 157 Pa. Super. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-et-vir-v-pittsburgh-pasuperct-1945.