Strong v. City of Harlan

102 S.W.2d 353, 267 Ky. 454, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 26, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 102 S.W.2d 353 (Strong v. City of Harlan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strong v. City of Harlan, 102 S.W.2d 353, 267 Ky. 454, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 332 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This appeal requires our review of an action brought by the appellant, Mrs. Polly Strong, as the administratrix of the estate of her deceased son, John Strong, against the appellee, the City of Harlan, for the recovery of damages for his death, alleged to have been caused by its negligence in failing to keep its street where the accident occurred in a safe condition for public traveling.

Appellant’s son, John Strong, was killed at about 10 o ’clock on the night of July 28, 1935, when traveling towards his home in Harlan over North Main street, when it is claimed that due to the defective and unsafe-condition of the street his car was caused to leave it and plunge over an adjoining embankment and thence into a large tree, some 60 feet distant therefrom, resulting in his death.

The appellant, Mrs. Mary Strong, having qualified as his administratrix, brought this action to recover damages for his death, alleging in her petition that her son’s death was caused by the city’s negligence, to wit, in permitting a break or cave-in of the concrete paving on its North Main street to occur and to remain in a dangerous condition, without making timely or proper repair, for automobile traffic; in failing to properly warn the public of its dangerous condition until repaired and in allowing dirt, refuse, and debris to wash into and remain on the street, making it slippery and unsafe for travel; and that by reason of its said combined acts of negligence, the automobile in which her son was driving upon the occasion in. evidence was caused to leave the street, jump over its adjacent embankment, and collide with a tree below;.

The defendant city, here appellee, demurred to the petition and, without waiving same, filed answer thereto *456 traversing its allegations and by a second paragraph affirmatively pleaded contributory negligence of the deceased.

This plea was controverted by a reply, making up the issues. The evidence then offered by the plaintiff and her numerous witnesses, to support her alleged cause of action, is, in substance, that in the fall of 1934, the city had undertaken to widen North Main street, a main thoroughfare of the city, by adding to its west side a concrete slab, some 6 or 8 feet wide and 42 feet long; that this widening of the street was made at a point where it curves in its course and where the waters of the Cumberland river sweep in a current strongly against the street’s supporting soil, washing it away, with the result that this added slab of concrete, left without support, caved in in the following February, 1935, producing a hole in the street some 5 or 6 feet ■ deep; that the city was dilatory and negligent in failing to promptly repair this unsafe condition of its street, or ever properly restore it; and that at the time of the accident in evidence', the depression on such west side of the street, so created, was from 4 to 14 inches deep, making that part of the street unsafe for travel; and also that the street’s surface was rendered more dangerous by a slippery and slimy accumulation of refuse, dirt, and debris, negligently permitted to be washed onto and remain on the street.

Further, the evidence is that when the deceased was upon this occasion attempting to drive over this defectively made fill of the street’s cave-in, the left wheels of his car struck a hole therein, and against the jagged edge of the fill’s broken concrete side, which wrenched the car to his left and caused him to lose control of his steering wheel and car; that by reason of such loss of control, the car ran in a vacillating course for about 100 feet along the west curbing, or until it reached a break therein, through which it left the street and plunged over its embankment into a tree, some 60 feet beyond, causing his death.

Appellant both pleads and testifies that the negligence of the city in leaving its_ street in such an unsafe condition for travel and particularly in its failing to reasonably repair the depression or hole in the street, into which the deceased ran, was the proximate cause ■of the accident resulting in John Strong’s death.

*457 Further, the appellant, when testifying, introduced, in evidence a map prepared for her, depicting what she testifies was the wavering, changing course of the car, after striking this hole in the street, for a distance of about 100 feet, where it plunged over the embankment- and into a tree, some further 60 feet distant.

The record discloses that there were no eyewitnesses who could testify as to what caused the car, after-striking the hole in the street, if it did, to then further-advance in a broken, changing course along or near its left curb until it jumped the adjoining embankment. Its course, as depicted by appellant’s map, shows that while the car, upon striking the hole, was thereby pulled over to the left curb of the street, it further shows that the car repeatedly turned back into the street, or that its course was first into the -curb, then away from it, back into the street, which it repeated again and again, until it finally, when so zigzagging, left the street and went over the embankment.

The inference of appellant, deduced by her from such wavering course of the car after it struck the hole in the street, as depicted by the map and so testified to by her and her witnesses, is that the jerk, resulting from the car’s running its left wheels into this hole in the street; caused its driver to lose control of the steering-wheel -and the direction of the car’s course, with the result that it thereafter advanced along the street unguided, or as if without a driver, and plunged finally over the embankment.

The evidence for plaintiff also was that the deceased was an experienced and careful driver and that, he had not been drinking before the accident. Therefore, it is contended that the accident must have been caused in the way stated and that had there been any warning given as to the condition of the street at this point or a proper lighting of it by the city, the deceased would have been able to avoid the hole and steer a safe course over it.

Further, the appellant’s evidence was that this part of the street, alleged to have been dangerous and unsafe for driving, was intermediate between the deceased’s home and his place of employment and that he was, by reason of his required daily traveling, or driving over it in going to and from his home, fully advised. *458 as to what was the then condition of this part of the street at the time of the accident.

.At the conclusion of the evidence introduced for plaintiff, defendant moved for a directed verdict, which was refused.

Thereupon, defendant offered its counterproof in support of its denial of negligence in either suffering the caving in of. the new addition to the street to occur or in failing to make timely or proper repair thereof and of its denial that the alleged unsafe condition of the street (which it also denied existed at the time of the accident) could have caused the accident.

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139 S.W.2d 74 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W.2d 353, 267 Ky. 454, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-city-of-harlan-kyctapphigh-1937.