Olsen v. Portland Water Dist.
Decision Date | 24 June 1954 |
Citation | 107 A.2d 480,150 Me. 139 |
Court | Maine Supreme Court |
Parties | OLSEN v. PORTLAND WATER DIST. |
George H. Hinckley, Portland, for plaintiff.
Verrill, Dana, Walker, Philbrick & Whitehouse, Portland, for defendant.
Before FELLOWS, C. J., and WILLIAMSON, TIRRELL, WEBBER, BELIVEAU and TAPLEY, JJ.
This is an action for alleged negligence brought by Elizabeth M. Olsen to recover for injuries sustained, as she claims, when she stepped backwards against a manhole cover owned by the Portland Water District.At the close of the evidence the Justice presiding in the Superior Court for Cumberland County directed a verdict for the defendant.The case comes to the Law Court on the plaintiff's exceptions.
Briefly, the facts appear to be that the plaintiff was a Girl Scout leader 58 years of age.On the thirtieth day of April, 1952she was engaged in directing the movements of a troop of Girl Scouts, which troop was in front of the 'girl scout home' in Cape Elizabeth, Maine.The yard where the troop was moving back and forward in front of the home was a cleared gravelled surface.Beyond, or at the side of this gravelled yard and near the highway, is rough ground where there is a telephone pole, and near the telephone pole is a manhole of the defendant.This manhole contained meters, and was covered by an iron cover that was nearly two feet square.The manhole and telephone pole were surrounded by a small parcel of unimproved land, at or near the junction of two ways, with some grass and small bushes on it.
The Plaintiff was familiar with the location of the girl scout building, the yard in front of the building, and the adjoining ground in the neighborhood of the telephone pole and manhole cover.She had been a frequent visitor for ten years, although this was the first Spring visit.She was active in girl scout work, and trained girl scouts in the building and on the gravelled land in front, and elsewhere.
The plaintiff testified as follows:
pace, then I lined up three lines of girls for competition; we were going to pick out the best group in the scouts' pace, so we lined them up and I blew my whistle for them to start and I stepped back and went over backwards.
'
'
The plaintiff also testified that she was in that spot outdoors with the troop for a quarter to half an hour before her accident; that she did not know the manhole cover was there; that she paid no particular attention to the land near the telephone pole where she was standing, just 'looked around in general,' and noticed nothing 'wrong.'
'
Assistant Superintendent Bodge of the defendant District was called by the plaintiff as her first witness, and testified that he examined the manhole two days after the accident, and that it was then about four inches above the surrounding ground.It consisted of a plank lined vault, five feet deep and 22 X 20 inches on top, covered by an iron frame rectangular in shape with a round cover set in the rectangular frame.Inside the vault were water meters, read every three months by a District meter reader.One meter was for the girl scout building and one for a nearby residence.When the Assistant Superintendent made his examination he found that the top of the wooden lining of the vault, consisting of horizontal hemlock planks, had rotted away and had been repaired by taking the iron top off, and the old plank replaced by oak plank such as was not used by the District.Whoever made the repairs had laid the oak plank even with the ground, and the iron frame, four inches deep, was above ground.The plaintiff's witness did not know who made the repairs; that the defendant District had not ordered them; that it was his duty to order all repairs made; that no complaint about this manhole had come to him; that he could not say if frost was responsible for this four inch height; that the cover of the vault was clearly visible, and there was no accumulation of grass to hide it.
James Whitten the meter reader for the defendant, who had been employed as meter reacher for thirteen years, testified that he examined this manhole and read the meters on the twenty-first of March, and that on that day the manhole cover was even with the surface of the ground although there were new plank inside.Whitten did not know what happened if anything after he read the meter and before the date of the accident on April 30th.
The plaintiff claims that she was in the exercise of due care; that with the cover four inches above the ground, she says it was a 'concealed danger,' although at that time in the Spring there was little or no grass, and no grass would grow on an iron cover in any season.The cover could be plainly seen and the plaintiff says she saw it after she fell.She did not look to see where she was stepping before she stepped back and fell.She said she struck on 'the iron I imagine.'She did not know and did not say she knew what caused her to fall.She reasoned after the fall and after she looked at the manhole frame and cover, that it was the frame and cover that caused her injury.
The plaintiff claims in her writ that the defendant District was negligent in that it did not maintain a manhole and manhole cover in proper condition because the cover was four inches above the ground 'creating a hazard and causing an obstruction over which said plaintiff tripped and fell.'
A verdict should be directed when, giving the evidence introduced full probative value, it is plain that a contrary verdict could not be sustained.Weed v. Clark, 118 Me. 466, 109 A. 8;Johnson v. Portland Terminal Co., 131 Me. 311, 312, 162 A. 518;Heath v. Jaquith, 68 Me. 433, 436.
Ordinary care requires that one give attention to where he is walking, even on a city sidewalk.Witham v. City of Portland, 72 Me. 539;Raymond v. City of Lowell, 6 Cush., Mass., 524, 533;McClain v. Caribou Nat. Bank, 100 Me. 437, 62 A. 144.
One who steps backward without paying attention to where she is stepping is not in the exercise of due and reasonable care, as a matter of law.SeeCrocker v. Inhabitants of Town of Orono, 112 Me. 116, 119, 90 A. 978.'Thoughtless inattention spells negligence.'Callahan v. Amos D. Bridges Sons, 128 Me. 346, 147 A. 423;Tasker v. Inhabitants of Farmingdale, 85 Me. 523, 27 A. 464.
When it is sought to establish a case upon inferences drawn from facts, it must be from facts proven.Inferences based on mere conjecture or probabilities will not support a verdict.Where verdict directed for defendant, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.Bernstein v. Carmichael, 146 Me. 446, 82 A.2d 786;Alden v. Maine Central R. Co., 112 Me. 515, 92 A. 651;Mahan v. Hines, 120 Me. 371, 115 A. 132.
The burden of proof in an action for negligence is upon the plaintiff, not only to show the negligence of the defendant but to show that no want...
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