36 Kan. 196 | Kan. | 1887
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought by Ida Hendricks against the city of Abilene, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by reason of a fall occasioned by a defective or improperly-constructed sidewalk. The case was tried by the court and a jury, and the jury found a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, and assessed the damages at $1,900, and in accordance with this verdict the court rendered judgment. To reverse this judgment the defendant, as plaintiff in error, brings the case to this court.
As the finding of the jury was general and in favor of the plaintiff, we must assume that all the facts which the evidence in her favor tended to prove were sufficiently proved, and were and are true; and, viewing the case in this light, the principal facts are substantially as follows: The plaintiff was an unmarried lady, about thirty-three years of age, residing with her mother, a widow, in the city of Abilene. She had resided there for about six years prior to the injury complained of; but for about six weeks prior thereto, and up to within four or five days prior thereto, she had been absent from Abilene, and did not know what the condition of the streets was where the alleged injury occurred. The injury occurred after dark, at about 8 o’clock-in the evening of September 10,1883, at the northwest corner of North Third and Spruce streets, in the city of Abilene. It appears that a new
Taking the foregoing facts as true, we think the plaintiff has a right to recover for her injuries, and that the judgment rendered in this case must be affirmed, unless some error occurred during the progress of the case which will require a reversal of the judgment. We shall now proceed to consider the errors alleged by the plaintiff in error.
• I. It is alleged that the court below erred in impaneling the jury. The specific thing complained of is, that the court below instructed the clerk that, in calling the names found on the jury-list for the purpose of impaneling the jury, the clerk might omit the names of such persons as were known to be residents of the city of Abilene, and the clerk did omit the names of two such persons, to wit, Armitage and Malone. It seems to be admitted that these two persons were residents of Abilene, but whether they were tax-payers or not, is not shown. The jury was made up from the regular list of jurors, and the jury seems to have been unexceptionable. The only supposed irregularity in impaneling the jury was in passing over the names of these two persons and in calling the names of persons below them on the jury-list. The defendant exhausted all its peremptory challenges, and neither Armitage nor Malone served on the jury. We do not think that any material error was committed. If Armitage and Malone were tax-payers of the city of Abilene, and probably they were, they were unquestionably incompetent to serve as jurors in this case. (Gibson v. City of Wyandotte, 20 Kas. 156; Corlett v. City of Leavenworth, 27 id. 673.) But even if they were not tax-payers, still, as they were residents of the city of Abilene, they would not make the best of jurors for this case. The ease of Hollenbeck v. Marshalltown, 62 Iowa, 21, cited by the plaintiff in error, does not decide that such persons are competent as jurors in a case in which the city of their residence is a party; but all that it does decide is, that where a city is defendant in an action for damages, and the court overrules a challenge made by the city to the competency of a juror,
II. It is further claimed that “the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as asked by the plaintiff in error, and was guilty of an abuse of discretion in giving the instructions which were given.” We do not think that this claim of errfir is tenable. The court below gave substantially in the general charge all the instructions asked for by the defendant, plaintiff in error, except the second instruction, which reads as follows:
“ It is frequently necessary to obstruct portions of the street where new buildings are being erected, and the city is not liable for damages resulting from such obstruction if the dangerous place is properly guarded and a sufficient portion of the street for ordinary purposes is left unobstructed.”
This instruction we think is good law, but it does not have any application to this case; and it would have been misleading and erroneous if it had been given in this case. The sidewalk in the present case was not designed or intended as an obstruction to travel or otherwise, but it was intended for a sidewalk, and looking at it from the west end, where the plaintiff got upon it, it would seem that people were invited to walk upon it. Besides, the dangerous place with reference to this sidewalk, and the place where the injury in this case occurred, was not properly guarded, nor guarded at all. There were no guards or lights to prevent injury. We find nothing materially erroneous in the general charge, and we think it properly covered all matters which required any instructions to be given.
III. It is further claimed that “the court erred in admitting testimony over the objections of the plaintiff in error,
IV. We do not think that it is necessary to comment in detail upon any of the other alleged errors. They are not tenable. We might mention the fact, however, that the defendant, in rebuttal, ou the examination of one of its own witnesses, asked the following question: “ What provision was made for getting around that obstruction — that sidewalk at the Third street crossing?” This question was objected to by the plaintiff, and the court sustained the objection, and in doing so used the following language:
“The objection is sustained, unless you bring notice home to this plaintiff as to the condition of this sidewalk, and that she could see around it.”
It had already been shown that she at that time was unacquainted with the condition of the sidewalk and the streets, and that it was dark, and that she did not know of and could not see the path leading around the sidewalk. We might further say, that the allegations of the petition are amply sufficient to authorize the plaintiff to introduce evidence tending
We do not think that the court below committed any material error in the casé, and therefore its judgment will be affirmed.