183 Iowa 818 | Iowa | 1918
This action is brought to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained as a result of a fall on one of the sidewalks of defendant city. The injury is alleged to have occurred on December 25, 1915. The action is bottomed on negligence. The negligence charged is, in substance, that the city permitted snow and ice that had accumulated through natural causes to remain there, after it had become rough, rounded, irregular, and uneven, and that this condition rendered the walk dangerous and unsafe for travel, and was the proximate cause of the fall, and the injury resulting therefrom.. The negligence upon which plaintiff predicates her right to recover is charged in her petition in the following language:
“(1) The defendant was negligent in allowing said obstruction to accumulate and remain upon the sidewalk.
“(2) The defendant was negligent iu that the surface of said sidewalk was uneven with holes, depressions, and pockets therein, and the snow and ice were allowed to accumulate where the said surface was so irregular and uneven, in the manner aforesaid.
“(3) The defendant was negligent in permitting the snow and ice to accumulate and become slippery, rough, rounded, irregular, and uneven.
“(4) The' defendant was negligent in failing to> remove the rough, rounded, irregular, and slippery accumulations of ice, and in failing to take any precaution, by sprinkling sand*820 and ashes thereon, to make the same reasonably safe for public travel.”
The answer was a general denial. The cause was tried to a jury, and a verdict returned for the plaintiff. Judgment being entered on the verdict, defendant appeals.
The plaintiff was a woman about 80 years of age. On this particular morning, about the hour of 10 A. M., she was proceeding on her way to church, along one of the walks of defendant, and reached a certain point on one of these sidewalks, and there slipped and fell, and received severe injury. She claims that her fall was due to the rough, rounded, and uneven condition of the walk at that point, and that this was what caused her to fall.
The fact of fall and injury is not in dispute, and we think there was sufficient to go to the jury as to the rough, rounded, and uneven condition of the walk at .the place where she fell. The jury could well have found, under the record, that the walk was, at the time of her fall, substantially as she alleges it to be in her petition. There is sufficient evidence, though not particularly strong, that the walk had been in that condition for such a length of time before the injury that the city, if it did not in fact know the condition, could, and therefore should, have known and remedied it before the fall. The fact question was fairly submitted to the jury, and they found for the plaintiff. There is sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict, and we do not, therefore, interfere. Defendant, however, claims that error was committed on the trial to its prejudice. There are but three errors assigned:
(1) Error in the instructions given by the court to the jury.
(2) Error in refusing instructions asked by the defendant. ■ ■
(3) Failure to give instructions on a matter on which it is claimed the instructions should have been given, in order to enable the jury to determine the rights of the parties under .the record made.
“The mere fact that a street is in a dangerous condition because of ice and snow,, rendering the walks slippery by reason of the operation of natural causes, should not render the city liable, even if such ice and snow are not removed in a reasonable time. But when it becomes, by reason of the travel thereon, or other causes, rounded or in ridges, then it may be that the city should be required to remove such ice and snow.”
So we have no hesitancy in saying that, under these authorities, tlie condition here shown constitutes actionable negligence.
It is contended by the defendant, however, that the court erred in its instructions to the jury; that it erred in giving Instructions Fos. 3, 7, 8, 9%, and 10.
At the time this trial was had, Section 3705-a of the Supplement to the Code, 1913, was in force, which provided that all objections or exceptions to instructions must be made before the instructions are read to the jury, and must point out the grounds thereof specifically and with reasonable exactness; but, upon a showing in a motion for a new trial that an error in such instructions Avas not discovered by the party at the time of the trial, such objections or exceptions may be made in the same manner in such motion for a neAV trial.
Instructions Nos. 8 and 9% Avere not objected to before the reading, but were objected to in the motion for a new trial. There was no showing, however, that the errors complained of Avere not discovered in time to interpose them before the reading. We had occasion to pass upon this question recently in Dimond v. Peace River L. & D. Co., 182 Iowa 400; Chumbley v. Courtney, 181 Iowa 482; Eley v. Chicago G. W. R. Co., ( Iowa) 166 N. W. 739.
To intelligently understand this instruction, all its parts must be considered. The court submitted four grounds of negligence, and said:
“And the acts or omissions to act which plaintiff says constitute the negligence of which she complains, and upon which she predicates her right to recover, are: [Here the court set out plaintiff’s charge of negligence in the words*825 in which it was charged in the petition, as hereinbefore set out.] * * * These are the only acts or omissions to act,- on the part of the defendant, which, if proven, may be considered in determining whether she has shown a right to recover.”
A sidewalk is that portion of the street set apart for the use of pedestrians. The thing or condition which renders the sidewalk, so set apart, dangerous and unsafe, is the thing or condition out of which the actionable negligence, if any, must arise, whether it be on the surface or under the surface, if it be in the line of travel. It may be that there was not sufficient evidence to justify a jury in finding that the sidewalk itself — meaning thereby the thing placed on the ground, set apart for a walk — was defective, though there is some evidence of defects in the construction. But, however that may be, defendant was not prejudiced by the court’s simply stating all negligence charged in the petition, even though the jury might not be able to say from the evidence that all claims' were proven. The jury could well find that the surface of the walk was dangerous for travel. The surface was the top of that set apart for travel, and the jury could not have been misled into thinking that anything else was referred to in this statement of the issue. The court, however, told the jury in this instruction that no liability could be predicated on any act of negligence charged, unless it was proven by the evidence. The mixture of snow and ice which rendered' the sidewalk unsafe for travel, rough, rounded, and uneven as it was, was on the top of that portion of the ground set apart for travel. It was, therefore, on the surface of the walk. If this rough, irregular, and rounded ice made the sidewalk dangerous, it made it so because it rendered the surface of the sidewalk dangerous for travel. The whole theory upon which the case was tried was that the snow and ice permitted to accumulate and remain upon this walk rendered the surface of the walk rough, uneven, rounded, and irregular, and dangerous for travel, and that this condition was the proximate cause of plain
It is next contended that the court .erred in giving the 7th instruction.
It is next contended that the court erred in refusing to give instructions asked by the -defendant. We have examined those instructions, and have to say that, in so far as they express the law correctly, they were fully given by the court in its own instructions. Therefore, a refusal could not and did not prejudice the rights of the defendant.
It is next contended that the court failed to call the
5. Municipal CORPORATIONS : streets, etc.: obstructions: power to remove, and assess costs. “They [meaning municipalities] shall have power to remove snow, ice or accumulations from abutting property from the sidewalk, without notice to the property owner, if the same has remained upon the walk for the period of ten hours, and assess the expenses thereof on the property from the front of which such snow, ice or accumulations shall be removed.”
It will be noted that this section does not attempt to regulate the duty which the city owes to the traveling public. It only regulates the expense of such removal between the city and the property owner, and we think the court would not have been justified in calling the attention of the jury to this, and that to do so would have injected confusion into the record.
We find no reversible error in the case, and the cause is — Affirmed.