Plaintiff instituted this action to recover for personal injuries sustained as the result of the alleged negligence of the defendant city in failing properly to maintain a gas plant owned and operated by it. Plaintiff appeals from an adverse judgment entered upon motion of the city for judgment upon the' pleadings.
The city in its answer alleged that plaintiff failed to give written notice of the time, place and cause of his injuries within sixty days after their occurrence as provided in SDC 45.1409. In his reply, plaintiff admits that he did not give notice within sixty days, but alleges the “fact to be that he was mentally and physcally incompetent to give notice in writing to the auditor of the said City of Dell Rapids of the time, place, and cause of his said injuries with sixty days following the date of said injuries as aforesaid; that he gave such written notice to the auditor of the said City of Dell Rapids within a reasonable time after he was mentally and physically capable of so doing.”
The motion for judgment on the pleadings should have been sustained only if no issue was framed thereby. Fargo v. Vincent,
The pertinent provisions of SDC 45.1409 read: “No action for the recovery of damages for personal injury or *58 death caused by its negligence shall be maintained against any municipality unless written notice of the time, place, and cause of the injury is given to the auditor or clerk by the person injured, his agent, or attorney, within sixty days after the injury. * * * Any action for such recovery must be commenced within two years from the occurence of the accident causing the injury or death.”
It is a settled principle that with respect to liability for tort a municipal corporation has a dual character. It is immune
from
liability when exercising powers of a governmental character, but liability for tort ordinarily attaches when exercising a corporate or proprietary function. Jensen v. Juul,
The statute does not expressly except the failure to give -timely notice because of disability resulting from mental or physical incapacity. Plaintiff contends that if he had not been so severely injured by the negligence of the defendant city as to render him incapable of complying he could have given notice and would have had a remedy for the wrong inflicted and that it is unreasonable to conclude that the legislature ever intended that a municipality may escape liability by reason of its own wrongful act in rendering the injured party incapable of complying with the requirements of the statute. Similar statutes have been construed in other jurisdictions and there is a divergence of authority as whether or not infancy or incapacity excuses failure to give timely notice. There are numerous cases holding that failure to comply with a notice requirement bars plaintiff’s recovery despite his infancy or incapacity during the period within which notice must be given. An excerpt from Peoples v. City of Valparaiso,
Plaintiff as we have stated proposes to show that he was incapacitated from giving written notice or causing same to be given by an agent or attorney for more than sixty days after his injury and that the very injury for which he seeks recovery resulted from the wrongful conduct of the defendant. We need not here lay down a general rule applicable in all cases of disability. The narrow question presented is whether a municipality acting in its proprietary capacity may avoid liability by invoking the provisions of the statute when compliance within the specified time was rendered impossible by reason of its wrongful act and for which plaintiff seeks to recover. It would seem anomalous if plaintiff rendered incapable of giving notice, by the same injury for which he seeks recovery is nevertheless barred from giving notice after he regains the ability to do so. As said, arguendo, in the concurring opinion in City and County of Denver v. Taylor,
We have made this determination on the allegations contained in the pleadings and have not considered the deposition of the plaintiff taken before trial and referred to by counsel. Whether plaintiff makes a case submissible to the jury on the issues as to whether plaintiff was mentally and physically incapacitated immediately following his injury and whether the statutory notice was given within a reasonable time after expiration of the period of incapacity is a matter in the first instance for the trial court.
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
