154 Minn. 167 | Minn. | 1923
Appeal from an order sustaining a general demurrer to the complaint.
The complaint alleges as a first cause of action that defendant city of Minneapolis is a municipal corporation duly created and existing under the laws of the state. That, among the different departments for the conduct of its municipal affairs, there is created by the city charter one designated as the department of public welfare, under which the duty is imposed upon the city to suppress and abate all nuisances created or existing within the limits of the municipality. It further alleges that the duty so imposed upon the city was wilfully and wantonly neglected in the failure to properly light a particularly named street of the city, by reason of which the part thereof so unlighted became a dark gruesome ambush for crime; which condition was permitted to remain and continue subsequent to the time of the wilful murder of a named pedestrian making use of the street; that by reason of that situation the unlighted street was an implied invitation for the commission of crimes upon persons traveling thereon in the night time and was a public nuisance. It also alleges that while plaintiff was upon the particular street on her way home at night she was wilfully assaulted, beat and bruised by an evil and criminally disposed person, in consequence of which she suffered damages in the sum of $3,000. As a second cause of action the complaint alleges that the city assumed to exercise the power to light the streets thereof, and thereafter negligently failed to do so in respect to the part of the street here in question, and with knowledge of its officers and agents of the fact that a citizen had prior to the time here complained of there been waylaid and murdered.
The authority conferred upon defendant to light its streets and other public places is governmental in character, is permissive,
Order affirmed.