Railway Co. v. Hopkins

Cockrill, C. J.

The appellant maintained a ticket office in the city of Little Rock, and advertised the fact by means of a large wooden sign fastened to the wall over the entrance from the street, fifteen feet above the sidewalk. The sign fell upon the appellee and injured him without fault of his, while he was upon the sidewalk. This appeal is prosecuted to reverse a judgment for damages in the sum of $750, recovered by the appellee for the injury.

When the sign-board was first put up, it was securely fastened. Its weight was supported by brick projections from the wall. Subsequently the servants of an electric light company removed it from its fastenings in order to run electric wires into the railway office. That fact was known to the railway agent in charge of the office. He had been warned at the outset, by the contractor who put the sign in the position, that the electric light workmen would be compelled to loosen the fastenings if they were permitted to follow instead of preceding him in their work. The sign was replaced in position by the electric light workmen, and two months thereafter fell and injured the plaintiff. An inspection of it after the accident showed that the wires which were used to hold it on two of the three hooks which held it in position had been cut with scissors close to the sign. The supposition of all the witnesses was that the cutting was done by the electric light workmen. There was no positive proof of that fact. The sign fell in the month of March. There was testimony tending to show that the usual March winds of this latitude prevailed at the time, while other witnesses thought there was no disturbance of any object on the street by the wind.

The railway complains of the following part of the charge to the jury : “If you find from the evidence that the defendant caused the sign mentioned in this' action to be placed on the side of and in front of its ticket office in the city of Little Rock, and over and above the sidewalk, which is a public highway, and that while the plaintiff was on said sidewalk and under said sign, the same fell of its own weight from its place and upon the plaintiff and injured him,, you are instructed that the fact of the falling of said sign in the manner aforesaid raises a presumption of negligence in maintaining said sign, and you should find for the plaintiff, unless you should find that said presumption is overcome by a fair preponderance of evidence going to show that a proper degree of diligence had been exercised by defendant.”

It is argued that the charge directs the jury to presume-negligence without finding proof of it.

X. N e g 1 gene e—S i o v erhangi sidewalk. ii-If it had left the jury to find against the railway, merely proof that the plaintiff had been injured by the falling of a sign from a building in which the railway was an occupant, it would be subject to the objection urged, and therefore erroneous. But the charge must be read in the-light, of the admitted facts and of the hypothesis upon which it is based. They are as follows:

The sign was placed in a position where it was sure to fall' upon the sidewalk, if it should fall at all, in a much fre.quented part of the city; it was maintained there by the defendant solely for its convenience; it was heavy and required precaution in fastening it in position to prevent it from falling; it fell “ of its own weight,” that is, because of insufficient fastenings to hold it under ordinary circumstances, and thereby an injury was inflicted upon one who-was rightfully in the public street.

Upon such a case found, negligence is an inference of law. The reason is as follows: The defendant was under a duty to the public to exercise common prudence to place and keep its sign in such position as not to endanger the safety of pedestrians in the street. As long as it performed that •duty, no injury would be inflicted in the ordinary course of things. The happening of the accident is evidence therefore of the neglect cf the duty, in the absence of proof that it happened out of the ordinary course. Mullen v. St. John, 57 N. Y., 567; Kearney v. London Ry. Co., L. R., 6 Q. B., 759; 10 Central L. J., 261, and numerous cases cited.

2. Negi sence' It is argued that the defendant is not liable because the evidence shows that the sign fell, not from insecurity of the original fastening, but because the sustaining wires had been cut by a third person. We must take it as settled by the verdict that the wires were cut by the electric light company’s workmen. The testimony furnished no reasonable probability that it was done by another. The managing agent of the defendant’s office knew that it was necessary for these workmen to cut or loosen the fastenings in order to complete the work the railway company desired to be done in its office, and knew that the sign had been removed for that purpose. It was the company’s duty therefore to see that the fastenings were safely restored. In no other manner could it guard against the danger to which the public would otherwise be exposed, and it is liable for the consequences of having neglected to do so. Gray v. Boston Gas Co., 114 Mass , 149-153.

The fact that the electric light company was an independent contractor, and not the servant of the railway, in performing the work in the prosecution of which the wires were cut, did not relieve the railway of its duty to the public to see that the sign was secure after the contractor had •completed his work. Khron v. Brock, 144 Mass., 516.

If the injury had been inflicted through the negligence of the contractor’s servants while in the execution of the contract, no liability would have attached to the railway. Railway v. Yonley, 53 Ark., 503. But no such case was made by the proof. The court did not err therefore in rejecting the railway’s prayer to charge upon the subject of its non-liability for work done by an independent contractor.

3 ActofGod The court refused to instruct the jury that the defendant was not liable for the injury if the sign fell from the act of God. There was no testimony to base the charge upon. The strongest testimony for the defendant was that the accident happened on a windy day in March. But it was the defendant’s duty to take such precaution in fastening its-sign as to make it secure against the ravages of such winds-as might be expected in the regular course of the seasons. Southern Ex. Co. v. Texarkana Water Co., ante, p. 131. An injury resulting from a failure to take such precaution is attributable to its neglect, and not to the act of God.

Other requests to charge the jury preferred by the defendant were rejected, but all they contained that could legally be demanded to go to the jury was submitted in the court’s-charge. As there is no error, the judgment is affirmed.