Thе accident involved in this suit occurred at or near the intersection of Eighth street and Avenue C of the defendant’s streets. Eighth street runs north and south, and at the time of the accident, and prior thereto, was occupied by a street rаilway track. The street was torn up in the course of improvement by the street railway company, which was then engaged in double tracking its line along this street. For the purpose of such improvement, the paving along the center line of the street was taken up for a width of sixteen feet. Within such zone the double tracks were laid upon ties whose ends extended about one foot in each direction beyond the line of the rail. The excavation alоng the center line, over which the rails and ties were hung, was eighteen inches deep. On each side of the excavation a strip of paving was left undisturbed of about ten feet wide. However, the strip along the west side was fully obstructed and occupied with building material and material resulting from the excavation. On the east side the ten-foot strip was kept open for the purpose of public travel. Avenue C extended west from Eighth street. It had no extension to thе east thereof. The plaintiff and her husband, riding in a buggy drawn by one horse, came towards Eighth street from the west along Avenue C. They crossed Eighth street over some temporary bridging that had been laid thereon, and were in the act of turning south to рass along the ten-foot strip of paving on the east side when they observed at some distance a team coming toward them on the same strip. Thereupon the husband undertook to back his vehicle so as to enable the team to pass by. In this effort the horse stepped into a hole in the paving near the east rail. The horse became
Statement.
North Eighth street in the city of Council Bluffs runs north from Broadway, taking a due north and south course. Broadway is the principal east and west street of the city. West of Eighth street, and north of Broadway, the east and west streets are lettered as avenues, commencing with the first street north of Broadway known as Avenue A, and continuing on to and including’0. East of Eighth street, and north of Brоadway, the streets running east and west, and substantially parallel with Broadway, are as follows: Washington avenue, Mynster street, and Mill street. The east and west streets on each side of Eighth street do not connect; that is, Washington avenue intеrsects Eighth street about one hundred feet north of Avenue A, Mynster street intersects Eighth street about one hundred feet north of Avenue B, and Mill street intersects Eighth street about one hundred feet north of Avenue C. A short time before the date of thе accident in question, to wit, April 27, 1911, the Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Company commenced the construction of a double-track street railway line at the intersection of Broadway and Main streets, purposing to so construct a line for a distance of eight blocks. About 2 o’clock on the afternoon of April 27, 1911, appellee, Emma Asher, in company with her husband, Daniel Asher, who was doing the driving, started for the main portion of Council Bluffs, leaving their home on thе corner of Sixteenth street and Avenue 0 about 2 o’clock in the afternoon. They drove east to Ninth street, which is a street one block west of Eighth street, and parallel with it; thence south on Ninth street to Avenue B, intending to turn eas-t on Avenue B. They observed, however, that Avenue B was blockaded, and travel along it cut off. They observed the street railway in process of construction along Eighth street at Avenue B (Abstract, page 20, lines 16-19). The testimony of the plaintiff’s husband shоws that he drove up Avenue B to Ninth street, which he found blockaded, and that he turned north on Ninth street to Avenue C, and then
The foregoing is subject to some slight corrections which may be noted later.
. The charge of negligence set forth in the petition is very broad, and not very definite. The substance of the charge is that the defendant negligеntly failed to maintain this traveled strip on Eighth street in a reasonably safe condition for public travel, and that it failed to warn the plaintiff of its actual condition.
The principal proposition argued by the appellant is that it was. entitled to a directed verdict, and that the trial court erred in failing to sustain its motion to that effect. Its general contention is that the defects complained of were purely incidental to the work of improvement which was in progress thereon, and that such improvement was lawful and lawfully done, and that there was nothing which the city could have done consistently with the making of such improvement which would have rendered the street more safe than it was.
progress thereon is not seriously questioned. Jones v. City of Clinton,
The question of contributory negligence of the plaintiff and her husband was submitted by the court to the jury by instruction against which no complaint is made, except that' it is claimed that they were guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. We reach the conсlusion, however, that the defendant was not entitled to a directed verdict, either on the ground of contributory negligence of the plaintiff, or on the ground of absence of negligence on its own part.
Appellant has directed argument specifically against several of the instructions. We need not deal with these separately. The instructions complained of are consistent with our views above expressed. What we have already said, therefore, must be deemed as sufficient response to this part of the argument.
The judgment below is accordingly — Affirmed.
