150 Iowa 141 | Iowa | 1911
While plaintiff, was driving a horse along a street of the defendant town, one Sterns, who, as alleged, was driving a horse and vehicle in a careless and reckless manner along said street in the opposite direction and upon the wrong side of the street, ran the shafts of his vehicle into the plaintiff’s horse, causing the damage complained of. The alleged negligence of the defendant town contributing to the injury consisted in the fact that, although the town had undertaken to light said street and to secure safety to travelers thereon, it failed in its duty to reasonably light the same; such failure being caused by the use of lights of low and insufficient power, placed at too great a distance apart at the extreme outer edge of the street, and in permitting the trunks of large trees and their branches to obstruct the light, with the result that at intervals between the lights, and where such lights were obstructed by the trees, a traveler on the street was blinded by passing from the light into the darkness; the street being thus rendered ’ unsafe for travel. Plaintiff alleged that the acts of the town in these respects created a nuisance. The demurrer challenged the sufficiency of plaintiff’s petition to show negligence or the existence of a nuisance, and also interposed 'the objection that the alleged negligence of the town was not the responsible and proxiimate cause of the injury.
As the plaintiff’s petition does not state facts tending to show that the defendant town permitted a nuisance in its streets or was negligent in failing to make them safe for travel, we need not discuss the question of proximate cause. The judgment is affirmed.