Yazoo City v. Loggins

110 So. 833, 145 Miss. 793, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 39
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1926
DocketNo. 25873.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 110 So. 833 (Yazoo City v. Loggins) 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
Yazoo City v. Loggins, 110 So. 833, 145 Miss. 793, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 39 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Yazoo county awarding the appellee damages in the *803 stun of ten thousand dollars for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the appellee as the result of falling into an unguarded excavation in a sidewalk of said city, the appellant herein.

The original declaration filed by the appellee averred that on February 8, 1926, a private party dug a ditch across the sidewalk on F'ilmore street in said city for the purpose of making a sewerage connection with the resi deuce of an abutting property owner; that the ditch was dug in the afternoon of the day on which the injury occurred, and was not completed and not filled up before nightfall, hut was left open across the sidewalk from working hours until the happening of plaintiff’s injury several hours after nightfall. This declaration further alleged:

That “said private party did not fence off said ditch across said street and did not erect guards for stopping pedestrians across said sidewalk, hut left lighted only on*1, lantern to warn passing pedestrians using said sidewalks of said ditch across same; that the defendant city had notice of the ditch, hut provided no fences, guards, harriers, or lights as a warning to passing pedestrians; that, on the day in question, and several hours after night.fall, the plaintiff, who was returning to his home over said sidewalk, reached the place where the ditch was dug, and, there being no guard or fence erected around the same, and seeing no light thereat, necessarily and unavoidably stepped into the ditch, and was violently thrown to the ground, resulting in the fracture of one of his legs, and that the said lantern left lighted hy the pii-vate party who dug the ditch had, before the ditch was reached by the plaintiff, become extinguished. ’ ’

To this declaration, the appellant demurred on the ground that the declaration charged no negligence, and stated no cause of action against the defendant, but alleged that the ditch was dug by a private party, and that said private party who dug the ditch left a lighted lantern to warn pedestrians using said sidewalk. This de *804 murrer was sustained, and the appellant thereafter filed an amended declaration, in which the averment that the private contractor left a lighted lantern to warn pedestrians of the presence of the ditch was omitted, and it was alleged that the defendant allowed a private party to dig the ditch in question, and negligently failed to provide sufficient lights, fences, barriers, or guards, as warnings of and protection from said open ditch for the benefit of pedestrians along said street, and negligently failed to exercise the prudence required of it to warn and protect parties passing along said street from said open ditch. To this declaration, the appellant filed a plea of the general issue and gave notice thereunder that it would offer evidence to show that it had no knowledge of the existence of the ditch, and that the private contractor who dug the ditch properly guarded the same by placing, at said ditch, two oil lanterns with red chimneys, both of which lanterns were in good condition, filled'with oil, lighted, and left burning as a warning of the presence of said ditch, and that said lanterns properly guarded said ditch and disclosed the same to any one approaching, it.

Counsel for the respective parties are in accord as to the legal principles which measure the rights and duties of a municipality in respect to dangerous obstructions or excavations in its streets, which may be stated as follows:

First, a municipality is not an insurer of the safety of its streets and sidewalks, but is only required to exercise ordinary care to keep them in a reasonably safe condition for the use of the public; and, second, where necessary excavations and openings in streets and sidewalks have been made, the "duty of the municipality is to use ordinary care to warn travelers of the danger, and, if the dangerous condition has been created by a third party, and such party has erected or placed a suitable warning of the danger, the municipality is relieved of the necessity of taking like precautions, and it may avail itself in its defense of the warning placed by the author of the dan *805 ger; and, third, if a municipality trusts to others to see that guards or warning are properly kept up, it will be liable for the consequences of its negligence, but, where sufficient warning of existing danger has been provided, and the same has been removed, by accident or otherwise, without negligence on the part of the party charged with the duty of providing the warning, and the municipality has no actual notice of such removal, and is not charged with notice thereof by the lapse of time, it is not liable for an injury resulting from the absence of such warning.

In the application of the foregoing legal principles to the facts here in evidence, counsel are not in agreement, and the appellant very earnestly insists that the peremptory instruction requested by him should have been granted, for the reason that the evidence shows without conflict that a proper and sufficient red lantern was placed at the excavation on the sidewalk when the workmen left the job in the late afternoon, and that said lighted lantern continued to burn until a few minutes before the injury to appellee, and that the same was thereupon extinguished without the knowledge or fault of the appellant or the private contractor who had placed the warning.

After a careful and repeated examination of the testimony of the several witnesses who testified as to the presence or absence of this lighted red lantern, we are of the opinion that there is sufficient in the evidence to require the submission of the issue to the jury. We deem it unnecessary to set forth, in detail, the testimony of the numerous witnesses on this point. That no lighted lantern was on the sidewalk when appellee was injured, which injury occurred between 7:30 and eight o ’clock at night, is undisputed. The foreman who was in charge of the digging of the ditch from the middle of the street to and across the sidewalk testified thát, in the course of digging the. ditch, they reached the sidewalk about twenty minutes before five o’clock in the afternoon, and that digging the trench across the sidewalk was the last work done by them that day; that they quit work about 5:15 *806 o ’clock, and lie then lighted two red lanterns and placed one in the middle of the' street, and the other on the sidewalk at the excavation, and the workmen then immediately left the scene. Other witnesses testified that these two lanterns were so placed and were burning up to about 7:20 o ’clock that night. On the other hand, J. C. Hinton, a witness for the appellee, testified that he passed along this street after the ditch was dug across the sidewalk, and after the workmen were gone,' and that a lighted lantern was then at the excavation in the middle of the street, hut the other lantern was unlighted, and was sitting, not on the sidewalk, hut in the street, near the edge thereof.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Willing v. Estate of Benz
958 So. 2d 1240 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2007)
Tighe v. Crosthwait
665 So. 2d 1337 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1995)
Williams v. Sullivan
209 So. 2d 618 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1968)
Shearron v. Shearron
68 So. 2d 71 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1953)
Dixie Drive It Yourself System v. Matthews
54 So. 2d 263 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)
Couch v. Hutcherson
8 So. 2d 580 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1942)
Kennedy v. Little
2 So. 2d 163 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1941)
M. & A. Motor Freight Lines, Inc. v. Villere
1 So. 2d 788 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1941)
Avery v. Collins
157 So. 695 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1934)
Lee County Gin Co. v. Middlebrooks
137 So. 108 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 So. 833, 145 Miss. 793, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yazoo-city-v-loggins-miss-1926.