53 Neb. 755 | Neb. | 1898
This action was instituted in the court below against Dakota county to recover damages for personal injuries
The record discloses that the suit was commenced more than thirty days after the alleged injury and damages occurred, which fact, the defendant insists, is sufficient to defeat a recovery. This contention is based upon section 4, chapter 7, Laws 1889 (Compiled Statutes 1897, ch. 78, sec. 117), which reads as follows: “If special damage happens to any person, his team, carnage, or other property by means of insufficiency, or want of repairs of a highway or bridge, which the. county or counties are liable to keep in repair, the person sustaining the damage may recover in a case against the county, and if damages accrue in consequence of the insufficiency or want of repair of a road or bridge, erected and maintained by two or more counties, the action can be brought against all of the counties liable for the repairs of the same, and damages and costs shall be paid by the counties in proportion as they are liable for the repairs; Provided, however, That such action is commenced within thirty (30) days of the time of said injury or damage occurring.” It is obvious that, if the proviso clause of said section is valid legislation, the demurrer to the petition was properly sustained, since this suit was not commenced within the designated period of thirty days. It is argued by counsel for plaintiff that said proviso contravenes section 11, article 3, of the constitution, which declares: “No bill shall contain more than one’ subject, and the same shall be clearly expressed in its title. And no law shall be amended unless the new act contain the section or sections so amended and the section or sections so amended shall be repealed.” It is suggested that the said act of 1889 is inimical to the above provision for the reason it embraces two distinct subjects of legislation,
Foxworthy v. City of Hastings, 23 Neb. 772, does not conflict with the views already expressed. It was there held that a provision in an act creating cities of the second class, limiting the time to six months in which actions may be brought for negligence against any city embraced within such class, was invalid, as being special legislation, and not because such provision was passed in violation of section 11, article 3, of the constitution. Moreover, 'the act there under consideration created no right of action, but the obnoxious clause was intended as a new statute of limitation for an existing remedy or right of action.
In Weigel v. City of Hastings, 29 Neb. 379, it was ruled that the title of an act providing for the organization, government, and powers of cities of the second class having over five thousand inhabitants was not sufficiently comprehensive to include a provision exempting such cities from liability for damages resulting from the neglect of a street railway company to keep in a reasonably safe condition the street on which its line is being constructed. The provision of the act' there condemned was not germane to the subject-matter of the law expressed in the title, while in the statute under review the remedy thereby conferred is conditioned upon the proper steps being taken within a designated period, and the clause limiting the time for bringing the suit -was not an independent subject of legislation, but -was intimately connected with the main purpose and subject of the act.
Lancaster County v. Trimble, 33 Neb. 121, is not in point here. In that 'case there was under consideration section 1, article 4, chapter 77, Compiled Statutes, which authorized the foreclosure of tax liens by county commissioners where they have purchased for the county real
The remaining three cases cited by counsel for plaintiff, State v. LAncaster County, 17 Neb. 85, State v. Hurds, 19 Neb. 323, and Muldoon v. Levi, 25 Neb. 457, merely announce the familiar doctrine i hat where a statute contains provisions .which conflict with the constitution, if the valid and invalid poriions are capable of separation, the latter alone will be disregarded, in case that it appears that (lie invalid pari was not an inducement to the legislature to pass the remainder of the act.
It is urged that the act before us is bad because it modifies or amends the general statute of limitations contained in the (’ode, without, in any manner referring to the same. A short answer to this line of argument is that the act is complete in itself, and therefore is not inimical to the constitution merely because it may be in conflict with, or repugnant to, some prior statute. For an able, discussion of the question and citation of authorities see the opinion of Ryan, C., in State v. Cornell, 50 Neb. 526.
For the reason stated the district court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the petition, and the judgment is accordingly
Afiubukd.