Plaintiff, a boy about sixteen years of age, was engaged in carrying parcels from a store to its various customers throughout the city of St. Joseph. He did this on a bicycle.
On the 29th day of October, 1913, between six and seven in the evening he was going east on Felix street when his wheel ran into a defect in the street throwing him to the ground and injuring him. By his next friend he brought this suit to recover damages.
It is first contended that the city’s demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained and the case taken from the jury. But this is clearly without merit. It was not dark, though dusk had fallen, so that while plaintiff could see to go-, yet the hole in the pavement could not be seen and there was no lights to disclose or call attention to the defect. The boy did not know of the defect in the street and was not shown to have been going in a careless maimer or at a reckless speed. The defect in the street consisted of a sunken place about three feet across and from four to six-inches in depth (One witness testified ’to four and threeei-ghths inches by actual measurement). Defendant’s witnesses say it was a mere depression and of much less depth. It had been allowed to remain in that condition for at least five years prior to the injury. The defect was shown to have caused the fall and injury. Hence, there was undoubtedly a case for the jury.
Plaintiff’s instruction number 4 is objected to because, in giving the measure of damages, it authorized the jury to take into consideration pain and anguish likely to be suffered in the future, if any. But this objection is also without merit. 'The instruction is in an approved form and the petition not only pleaded future pain and suffering, but there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could find that such suffering would reasonably follow. The injury was to the head, and the testimony was that such injuries
Plaintiff’s instruction number 3 which submitted the issuable facts upon which recovery depended, in submitting the question whether the defect rendered the street dangerous or not, did so in these words “if you further believe and find from the evidence that said hole or indentation in the pavement rendered said Felix street and said Twenty-first street at said point dangerous and not reasonably safe for persons travelling’ in or on vehicles or on bicycles upon, along or over said streets, etc.” This told the jury that plaintiff could recover if the street was not reasonably safe either for ordinary vehicles or for bicycles. The city contended that this authorized the jury to find for plaintiff if they found that the street was dangerous to a bicycle although they might believe that it was otherwise reasonably safe for travel in general. In other words, the city says that the jury might well infer from that instruction that the city must not only exercise ordinary care to see that its streets were reasonably safe for general traffic but must also keep them reasonably free from such dangers as are peculiar to and liable to affect bicycles only. To prevent the jury from entertaining this idea, the city asked its instruction lettered A to the effect that “the city owes no greater duty to those riding bicycles upon its streets than it does to persons who may be passing along and over the same in another kind of vehicle” and that if the street was “in such state of repair as to make it reasonably safe for those passing along and over the same in vehicles usually used by persons travelling thereon while they themselves were using ordinary care in so doing, then the verdict should be for the defendant city.” This instruction A was refused and its refusal is excepted to as error.
Now if, under the instruction number 3 submitted by plaintiff, the jury were liable to understand that the street must be kept reasonably safe with a special view to bicycles, then defendant’s instruction “A” should have been given, since it would have tended at least to correct.that view and give the jury to understand that the duty resting upon the city was not to
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.