Stottlemyer v. Groh

94 A.2d 449, 201 Md. 414
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1969
Docket[No. 69, October Term, 1952.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 94 A.2d 449 (Stottlemyer v. Groh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stottlemyer v. Groh, 94 A.2d 449, 201 Md. 414 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

Sobeloff, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal brings up for review an order for judgment n.o.v. which set aside verdicts of the jury in favor of the appellants, Mr. and Mrs. Stottlemyer, for personal injuries sustained by Mrs. Stottlemyer. The sole question before us is whether there was sufficient evidence to justify submission to the jury of the question of the appellee’s negligence.

Having purchased a lot located at the northwest corner of Mulberry and Baltimore Streets in Hagerstown improved by five three-story brick dwellings facing Mulberry Street, the appellee proceeded to remodel the buildings. One of the changes which he effected was the installation of an oil tank in the yard in the rear of the properties. This necessitated an excavation of approximately 10 feet by 12 feet and the removal of the bricks with which that much of the yard surface had been paved. *417 The tank installation was to the rear of the buildings, and just north of the Baltimore Street property line. The bricks thus removed were piled on the appellee’s premises about 1^ feet to 2 feet from the sidewalk which paralleled that property line. The appellee’s testimony was that all the bricks removed from the yard for the installation of the tank were placed in an “L” shaped areaway between the first and second houses. This would locate the bricks approximately 20 feet from the property line which coincides with the edge of the street pavement; but in our consideration of the case we are obliged, as was the trial court on the motion n.o.v., to accept as fact the testimony of the appellants’ witnesses that the bricks were at the place designated by them within not more than 2 feet from the sidewalk. The fence along the north edge of the concrete sidewalk of East Baltimore Street, (the property line,) had been removed to facilitate remodeling operations and the pile of bricks was not closed off from the highway. The number of bricks thus piled on the appellee’s property was estimated to be between fifty and two hundred and it has been not unreasonably suggested by the appellants that, considering the size of the area excavated for the tank and from which the bricks were removed, there could have been as many as several hundred bricks in the pile. The bricks were not arranged in regular order but were heaped roughly, and the heap was estimated by all the witnesses to be not over 2 feet high.

A trench had been cut across the sidewalk for a sewer line some weeks before the accident. It was 18 inches in width and was located, according to the diagram furnished this court jointly by counsel for appellants and appellee, about 6 feet east of the brick pile. The trench had since been refilled, and each day before leaving the job the appellee’s workmen would add earth to the trench to compensate for the settling and to make it level with the rest of the sidewalk.

On the evening of February 8, 1951, Mrs. Stottlemyer was injured when she fell and struck her elbow against *418 the cement edge of the trench. The cause of her fall, according to her testimony, was a brick frozen to the sidewalk about 2 feet west of the trench and hence about 4 feet east of the pile of bricks and about 2 feet south of the building line. There was some testimony by a witness for the appellants, as well as one for the appellee, that Mrs. Stottlemyer was running at the time of her fall; but she and her husband testified that she was walking, and for our purposes it is assumed that she was walking. As the accident happened on a dark, cloudy night no question has been raised or argued of any contributory negligence on her part. Also we shall assume (though this is not free from doubt) that the evidence was sufficient for a finding that the brick, described as old and. of the same color as the piled bricks, was in fact the appellee’s and came from the above described pile.

One of the witnesses testified that after the accident he kicked the (frozen) brick but it adhered so firmly to the sidewalk that he could not budge it. It, in fact, remained in position until sometime in the afternoon of the following day.

Two theories are advanced by the appellants upon which they assert the jury might properly have found the appellee negligent.

1. The first theory is based on the contention that the brick which caused the injury could not have been frozen as firmly as it was to the sidewalk except after the lapse of a considerable period of time, so long in fact as to charge the appellee with constructive notice of its presence. The appellants accordingly point out that the sidewalk was cleared of the snow which had fallen two days before the accident; and they suggest that a brick placed on a clean concrete sidewalk, even on an extremely cold night, would not adhere at all, and that even if it were placed on a snow-covered surface any possible adhesion would be slight. They infer, therefore, from the tight adherence of the brick, that it fell or was dropped on a snow-covered surface while *419 thawing was occurring. “This being true”, their argument continues, “the brick must have been on the sidewalk since the last warm spell which, at the latest, had to have been around noon of the day of the accident or it must have been there since the 6th or 7th of February” (one or two days before the accident), since it was testified that it had snowed on one of those dates. Upon this series of assumptions and inferences the appellants predicate a conclusion that the appellee or his workmen had sufficient time to detect and remove the brick before the accident. This argument is ingenious but not convincing for it is too speculative. There was no evidence in the Record as to how long it would take a brick to freeze to the sidewalk, and we cannot say that a jury relying on its own knowledge and experience could without sheer speculation form a judgment as to the essential element, namely, the length of time the brick must necessarily have remained in position before the accident.

It is further reasoned by the appellants that as the location was much travelled by workmen of the appellee engaged in the remodeling operation in going to and from the trench to inspect and refill it, there was opportunity to correct the dangerous condition by removing the brick. This assumes that a brick was there for the workmen to see and remove, yet that is the very point which is essential to be established but is not supported by adequate testimony.

One of appellees’ witnesses testified that on the afternoon of the day of the accident he visited the site and no brick was there.

It is indisputable and elementary that the trial court should not withdraw from the consideration of the jury a contested question of fact if there is any evidence legally sufficient to support a finding of that fact. Repeatedly this court has declared that in the consideration of a demurrer prayer or a motion for a judgment n.o.v. the plaintiff is entitled to an assumption of the truth of all evidence favorable to him and to all such inferences *420 as may naturally and legitimately be deduced therefrom, but this is not to. say that a plaintiff is entitled, in the absence of testimony and upon a mére suggestion of possibilities to have a jury speculate in his favor.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A.2d 449, 201 Md. 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stottlemyer-v-groh-md-1969.