Milton v. Philadelphia
Milton v. Philadelphia
Opinion of the Court
Opinion bt
This is an action of trespass to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by reason of the negligence of the defendant. Trial by jury was waived and the case by agreement of the parties was referred to a referee under the act of 1874. The referee heard the witnesses produced by both sides and filed an elaborate opinion in which all matters in dispute were carefully considered. He found as a fact that the city was guilty of the negligence charged and that it should respond in damages to the amount of $2,500. Exceptions were taken to the material findings of fact and conclusions of law, and these exceptions were fully argued before the referee with the result that they were all dismissed and judgment was recommended to be entered in favor of the plaintiff upon the original award. Exceptions were then again taken and the case was fully argued before the learned court below with the result that the findings of fact and conclusions of law upon which the referee directed a judgment in favor of plaintiff to be entered were reversed and judgment was entered for defendant. From the judgment so entered by the court below this appeal was taken. The assignments of error do not raise any question as to the admission of testimony or as to the course of procedure before the referee. The learned court below based its decision entirely upon what was considered the preponderance of the testimony relating to the condition of the old door immediately before the accident, which, it was held, was not sufficient to give the city notice that it was dangerous
Judgment reversed and record remitted with instructions to enter judgment for plaintiff on the award of the referee.
Reference
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Negligence — Sidewalk—Defective covering — Finding of referee. In. an action of trespass for personal injuries against a city, charging negligence in suffering a pavement to become unsafe and in not properly guarding a hole in the sidewalk, tried before a referee without a jury, a finding for the plaintiff by the referee will be sustained where the evidence strongly tends to show that the hole, an old coal chute, occupied nearly half the width of the sidewalk and was in the direct line of travel at a point where the street was not well lighted, that it was covered by an ordinary house door, loosely thrown over it a year or two before the accident, which had become so rotten that when the plaintiff stepped thereon it broke with her weight and injured her,' that a policeman had marked the spot with a red light and that its condition was known to policemen and neighbors a long time prior to the accident.