Warren v. City of Tupelo

194 So. 293, 187 Miss. 816, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 252
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1940
DocketNo. 34029.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 194 So. 293 (Warren v. City of Tupelo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. City of Tupelo, 194 So. 293, 187 Miss. 816, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 252 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

*821 Me Go wen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Warren, appellant, sued the City of Tupelo, appellee, for damages for personal injuries sustained by him by reason of a limb of a tree having fallen upon his bead and neck. He alleged that the city was negligent as to the limb of the tree and the maintenance of its streets at that point.

To the declaration, the city plead the general issue, and gave notice that unusual and rather peculiar conditions existed at Tupelo at the time of the accident to Warren. At the conclusion of all of the evidence, both for plaintiff and defendant, in the court below, the court granted the appellee, the City of Tupelo, a peremptory instruction, and judgment was entered accordingly. Warren appeals therefrom, and assigns as error the granting of the peremptory instruction.

On the 23rd day of May, 1936, about 9 A. M., appellant Warren was standing on the sidewalk on South Broadway Street in front of his place of business, an automobile repair and welding shop, talking to a business *822 neighbor. While so engaged, a limb fell from a water oak tree and struck him on the head and neck which painfully and seriously injured him. All of the testimony tends to show that on April 5, 1936, a most disastrous storm occurred in the City of Tupelo; and that this limb which struck the appellant had, at that time, become wrenched or twisted due to the fury of the storm, and therefore fell suddenly and without warning. The limb was good seasoned timber, was not rotten, had not been dead long, and was about fifteen or twenty feet long and about three inches in diameter in the largest part. The tree from which the limb fell was a water oak about forty feet high, two and one-half feet in diameter, and at that season of the year its foliage was thick and heavy. There was another water oak about twenty feet south of this one. These trees were growing on the land between the sidewalk and the curb of the street in front of appellant’s place of business. The appellant had passed the tree daily for nearly four years and in all that time he had observed nothing strange or dangerous or out of the ordinary about it. Also, neither he nor his business associates or his friends had observed any loose limbs in the tree.

One witness for the appellant testified that, during the year before the storm, he had observed small limbs that had fallen from these trees. A lady testified that she was driving her car shortly after the storm and she had noticed a limb that had fallen near her car in that vicinity. One witness testified that two or three days after the storm he had seen wrenched limbs in this tree as he stood at his place of business across the street from that of the appellant. However, he did not report what he saw. After that he did not observe the wrenched limbs again, and did not know whether the limbs that he saw remained in the tree or not. Two ladies, who resided at a hotel across the street from the tree in question, testified that they had looked into the trees and admired their beauty almost every afternoon, had parked *823 their cars underneath it, and saw no signs of broken or wrenched limbs or any signs of danger therefrom.

On behalf of the city, it was shown that on this street, South Broadway, after the storm, a kitchen for feeding the public had been maintained and many of the people of Tupelo, officials of the city, and men connected with agencies undertaking to render aid to the stricken city, had passed along that street and beneath these streets almost daily and saw nothing amiss. These were people whose duty called them there frequently. Otae alderman testified that he looked up into the trees. The street commissioner and other officials of the city testified that when they had any notice after the storm of any danger from trees or anything else on the streets that they responded at once and that they had not had any notice that there was anything wrong about these trees. The mayor and other witnesses for the city testified as to the velocity of the storm, and the terror created by it. Twenty-five hundred trees were blown down. Many houses, including the high school, were either damaged beyond repair or absolutely demolished. Many people were killed, and many were injured from the debris of houses, fences, trees and the like. Hundreds of extra workers were employed to clear away debris. Agencies of the government and of the state went to the rescue. Nearby towns furnished men and material in aid of the stricken city. For at least thirty days, the wreckage engaged the attention, not only of all of the employees of the city, but of all these outside agencies.

The lower court granted the peremptory instruction on the theory that there was no notice to the city, either actual or constructive, that this limb was out of order in this particular water oak tree, or that there was any danger from any part of the tree to the pedestrian or other traveler on the street.

It is conceded that there was no actual notice, but on appeal here, the only question argued is whether or not the facts of the case, sufficiently detailed by us to be *824 understood, warranted the court in giving a peremptory instruction; but, on the contrary, it is insisted that whether or not constructive notice might be implied from these facts as against the city was a question for the jury.

It was freely conceded that the governing authority of the munieipalty had never maintained any inspectors for the specific purpose of examining the trees either before or after the storm.

In this state, it is quite well settled that the facts and circumstances of each case must determine whether constructive notice of defects (in the street) is to be attributed to the municipality, and ordinarily this is a question for the jury. City of Greenville v. Middleton, 124 Miss. 310, 86 So. 804.

It is further settled in this state that the duty of a municipality to keep its streets and sidewalk reasonably safe for the traveling public is not an absolute one. Reasonable care to keep it reasonably safe for those using them with due care is the criterion. Hazelhurst v. Mathis, 180 Miss. 42, 176 So. 384. A municipality in this state is not an insurer of the safety of the traveler on the streets.

The duty of a municipality to exercise reasonable care to ward against defects from overhead as well as underfoot exists. The danger may be as great from overhead as from underfoot, and it would be charged with that degree of care commensurate with the danger and risk as to trees which are permitted in the neutral ground between the' sidewalk and the street, and in a proper case it would be liable for damages ensuing to a pedestrian struck by a limb which had been negligently allowed to remain in a tree for such length of time as to evince want of ordinary care relative thereto. See 43 C. J. 1030, Sec. 1809, and especially Note 11.

In the case at bar, the injured party, as lessee of the land on which the tree stood and from which the limb fell, had a proprietary interest in the treé. The owner *825 of the property also had a proprietary interest. The appellant maintained a shop, and these trees were a boon to him in the summertime as he labored.

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Bluebook (online)
194 So. 293, 187 Miss. 816, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-city-of-tupelo-miss-1940.