67 Neb. 401 | Neb. | 1903
In this case plaintiff filed in the district court for Lancaster county, January 24, 1904, a petition setting out- its incorporation and that of the defendant bank; that the latter, November 1, 1894, and long prior thereto and thereafter, owned lot 13 in block 34 in plaintiff city, and maintained for its own use and benefit a vault under the sidewalk, which was a public sidewalk of the city on one of its principal thoroughfares, with a large opening or coal-hole through the sidewalk, constructed by defendant’s grantors, and maintained by it for its own benefit; that the lid covering this hole was defective, unfastened and insecure, and subject to displacement by any person stepping upon the edge of it, and was not of sufficient size and Aveight to securely cover the hole; that these facts were well known to the defendant; that about November 1, 1894, Mrs. Pirner stepped upon the coal-hole cover, and
The plaintiff claims that under the facts in this case the defendant is liable over to the city (1) at common law; (2) under the city charter, which at the time of the accident provided as follows: “It is hereby made the duty of all real estate owners and occupants to keep the sidewalk alongside or in front of the same in good repair and free from snow and ice and other obstructions, and they shall be liable for all damages or injuries occasioned by reason of the defective condition of any such sidewalk” [Compiled Statutes, 1893, ch. 13a, sec. 67, subdiv. 6] ; and (3) under the ordinance of the city providing for excava
The bank asserts that there is no common-law liability on its part for lack of any knowledge or notice on its part of the defective condition of this coal-hole; that no liability attaches to it as mere OAvner, for a mere passive neglect; that defendant’s possession of the property was only constructive, by reason of a sheriff’s deed bearing date about three weeks before Mrs. Pirner’s accident, and no actual knoAvledge on the part of the bank, or demand upon it for repairs, appears in the evidence; that there was no statutory liability, because in the year 1899, a year and more before the institution of this action, the statute above quoted Avas repealed; that any attempt to create such a liability by ordinance was unconstitutional and void; and that the right of action is barred by the statute of limitations, because the injury Avas sustained by Mrs. Pirner in 1894 — more than six years before the commencement of the action.
The bank appears clearly to have had notice of the pendency of Mrs. Pirner’s action against the city and to have refused to take any part in it. Under the admissions of the answer, therefore, the bank is concluded as to the existence of the trouble of which she complained— a defective lid on this coal-hole — as to her injury from that cause, and as to the amount of damages sustained by her. The bank, of course, is not concluded by that adjudi
Qhie sole questions in this case, then, are as to the responsibility of defendant merely because it was the OAvner of this coal-hole, and as to the statute of limitations. If either is found in favor of the defendant, the judgment must be affirmed. So far as the latter question is concerned, no authority Avhatever is cited, by defendant, and only some cases on sureties’ rights to contribution and officers’ claims for indemnity, by plaintiff. It seems clear, however, that if there exists any right on the part of the city to recover over against the bank because of the injury to Mrs. Pirner, it 'could only be when the city’s liability towards Mrs. Pirner became fixed. The Avrong, so far as the city is concerned, only became actionable when, damage to the city accrued, and that was only Adíen a final judgment in Mrs. Pirner’s favor was rendered. Any attempt to recover of the bank on plaintiff’s part before that time would have been futile, and the statute Avould not commence to run, as against a right of action, until such right of -action was in existence. Evidently the city could not assert its liability to Mrs. Pirner in a case against the bank so long as it Avas denying such liability in Mrs. Pirner’s own action in the same court, or in this one on review. It Avill not be necessary to discuss further the question of the statute of limitations. The city’s claim here is for indemnity against liability on Mrs. Pir-ner’s judgment, not for the injury to Mrs. Pirner.
It remains to see Avhether there is any right to charge defendant with responsibility for the condition of the coal-hole lid, either at common law, by statute or by ordinance of the city.
The common-laAV liability of the defendant is the claim most strongly urged by plaintiff. It rests, as above stated, solely on the ownership of the property on the defendant’s part by virtue of a sheriff’s deed bearing date about three weeks before Mrs! Pirner’s fall. One Carr,
“A party who comes into possession of lands as grantee or lessee, with a nuisance already existing on them, is not, in general, liable for the continuance of the nuisance until his attention has been called to it, and he
It is conceded by plaintiff that such is the general rule, but it is urged that it has no application to a public nuisance that results in an obstruction to the streets. The rule requiring at least notice to the purchaser of the existence of a nuisance, before his liability commences, is stated in Pollock on Torts,
Leahan v. Cochran,
Matthews v. Missouri P. R. Co., 26 Mo. App., 75, 81, is another case of obstruction in a highway, and liability is
The case of Morgan v. Illinois & St. Louis Bridge Co., 17 Fed. Cas., 749, No. 9,802, is cited by plaintiff:. The liability in the Missouri case is held to result because the receiver and the road which he represented, had maintained for three years, as lessees of another corporation, a fourteen-foot. cut in a crowded thoroughfare, without, railing or protection. It was held that the fact of the premises being in such condition when leased was no protection. A duty to protect, passers against their excavation, arose when they commenced to use it.
These cases are very far from showing a duty on defendant’s part to protect passers or the city from injury because of this coal-hole.
It seems clear that to bring the defendant within the exception to the rule requiring that purchasers have notice of the existence of a nuisance to render them liable, such possession and control of these premises as to cast upon it the duty of a (lively providing for the public safety must be shown. Such a duty is found and indicated in Irvine v. Wood, 51 N. Y. 224, 10 Am. Rep., 603, where it is held to devolve upon both landlord and tenants to see that an excavation under the street Avas made safe for passers. The numerous decisions as to the respective liabilities of lessor and lessee in such cases shoAV that the owner’s liability, Avliere it exists, is not as owner, but as creator or continuer of a nuisance. They may be found collected and discussed in Plumer v. Harper, 3 N. H., 88, 14 Am. Dec., 333, or more recently and fully in Wasson v. Pettit, 117 N. Y., 118,
The liability as owner, which is sought to be established by means of the statute before quoted, can not attach. As before stated, a right of action accrued in favor of the city only when its liability to Mrs. Pirner became fixed. This was after the repeal of the statute in question, which took place in 1899. The affirmance of Mrs. Pirner’s judgment was in 1900. The general saving clause in chapter 88, section 2, Compiled Statutes (Annotated Statutes, sec. 6966), relates only to causes of action accruing before such repeal.
The liability under the city ordinance is against the person who is “allowed to keep or use” a vault or excavation beneath • the street. As the evidence in this case entirely fails to show that defendant kept or used this excavation or coal-hole, there can be no liability under this ordinance. Indeed, the fact that the excavation and coal-hole were outside of the defendant’s lot, and entirely on the city’s land, and could not be maintained save with the consent of the city, is of itself a sufficient answer to any claim against defendant merely as owner of lot 13.' Doubtless possession, control and use of these premises would make defendant responsible for the safety of any excavation under the city’s streets, at least to the extent of talcing all reasonable precaution to make it safe. Wasson v. Pettit, 117 N. Y., 118, 5 L. R. A., 794. No such control appears here.
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
City of Lincoln v. Pirner, 59 Nebr., 634,
6th ed., p. 416.
Coke’s reports are cited by parts, not by volumes.
The title of this case in 117 N. Y., is Martin, Executor, v. Pettit. Elias AVasson, the original plaintiif, died pending- the appeal; and, upon sug-gestion of his death, his executor was substituted. — W. F. B.