Wile v. Los Angeles Ice & Cold Storage Co.
Before: Gray
Synopsis
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, and from an order denying a hew trial. D. K. Trask, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
GRAY, P. J.
Action for damages incurred by plaintiff in tripping on a large nail projecting from one of a number of planks placed upon the cement sidewalk to admit of the approach of teams temporarily to defendant’s building while the same was in course of construction. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment in his favor. The appeal is by the defendant from the judgment and from an order denying him a new trial.
The main contention of appellant is that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict as a matter of law, but we think this contention cannot be upheld. The board which contained the offending nail was part of a driveway to defendant’s property, constructed for a temporary use in connection with said property. From this a presumption arises that it was defendant’s driveway, defendant’s board, and defendant’s nail, all maintained there by defendant and with defendant’s knowledge. The duty was cast, in the first instance at least, upon the trial court to determine whether the testimony of the manager and two or three other agents and employees of the defendant, to the effect that they did not place the boards there and did not know who placed them there, was sufficient to rebut the presumption arising from the other facts. “At least in such a case the injured party ought not to be compelled to show affirmatively that there was no intervention of a third person which contributed to the result.”
(Barry
v.
Terkildsen,
72 Cal. 254, [1 Am. St. Rep. 55, 13 Pac. 657];
McKune
v.
Santa Clara etc. Co.,
110 Cal. 480, [42 Pac. 980].) The manager said the defendant was in occupation and possession of the premises as a whole and had authority there, and the fact that this manager did not know who placed these boards there might have led the jury to infer that he did not want to know. At all events, the question of who placed the
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planks there was one of fact, and after a careful examination of all the evidence we are thoroughly persuaded that the jury in its verdict, as well as the judge in denying the new trial, made no mistake in the solution of that question of fact. The same thing may properly be said as to the other questions of fact involved in the case. There can be no question that the maintenance of a spike two inches high in a sidewalk is, to put it mildly, a nuisance. It seems to have been dangerous “to life and limb.” The jury were fully warranted in declining to excuse the defendant for maintaining the same on any such ground as that “the spike was hard to see.” This, too, was a question of fact, and we find nothing in the record to transform it into a question of law. A city ordinance authorizing the planks does not necessarily include the protruding spike. It was the spike that caused the plaintiff’s downfall, and not the plank.
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