85 So. 425 | Ala. | 1920
Appellee sued appellant to recover damages for injuries sustained in a fall on the sidewalk of Catherine street, in the city of Mobile, as a result of a defect in the pavement, and from the judgment in her favor the city prosecutes this appeal.
The liability of the city is well established, and, indeed, not controverted, unless relieved therefrom by Loc. Acts 1907, p. 727, the title to which act is as follows:
"To provide for the more efficient working of the public roads in Mobile county, and certain streets and public thoroughfares in the city of Mobile; provide for the control, working, building, maintenance and improvement of the same by the board of revenue and road commissioners of Mobile county; to prescribe the duties and fix the authority of said board; provide for the levy and collection of a road tax, and the method of disbursing moneys necessary to carry out the provisions of this act, and provide penalties for violations of its provisions."
It is by virtue of section 1 of the act the city claims exemption from responsibility for any damages sustained by pedestrians on the sidewalk of Catherine street in said city, the provisions of which are as follows:
"Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of Alabama, that the entire control, management and supervision of public roads in the county of Mobile, and of all streets within the city of Mobile, south of and including Virginia street, west of and including Catherine street, north of and including Davis avenue or Stone street, as far east as Marmatte street, and east of said street those streets and thoroughfares which lie north of One Mile creek are hereby lodged and vested in the board of revenue and road commissioners of Mobile county and said board shall have full and complete authority to provide for the repair, maintenance and improvement of the same, and to that end may, in addition to the fund realized from the 'road tax' herein provided for, set apart and appropriate such amount from the general fund collected under authority of the law, as said board may deem necessary to carry out the provisions of this act."
The foregoing section was under review in State ex rel. v. Bd. R. R. Comms. Mobile County,
The plaintiff in the instant case sustained her injuries while upon the sidewalk of one of the streets named in the act, and the precise *27
question here presented for consideration is whether or not the word "street," as used in said act, was intended to include the sidewalk or merely the roadway thereof — a question which was not presented or considered when this act was previously under review, as above stated. In City Council of Montgomery v. Foster,
"By authoritative definition, as well as common usage, the term 'street' applies to the whole public thoroughfare, including sidewalks; the latter constituting parts of the street reserved to pedestrians. * * * The term, however, may be employed to designate the way between sidewalks, and how it should be understood in a given case may depend on the connection in which it is used."
The same general rule is recognized in 3 McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, § 1286, as follows:
"Whether a statute relating to streets includes sidewalks is generally to be determined from the probable intent of the Legislature."
In Board of Public Wks. v. Hayden,
"Sidewalks are a part of the street, although the word 'street' is sometimes used to denote that part of the street which is devoted to carriage travel."
Another illustration is found in the case of Himmelmann v. Satterlee,
"The authorities sustain the proposition that a bicycle is a 'vehicle,' and that its proper place is upon the highway,or the street proper [italics supplied], and not upon the sidewalk"
— which also illustrates the question here considered.
It is well understood, of course, that words used in a statute often have divers meanings, depending upon the connection in which they are used. As said in the Harrington Case,
"The extent of the meaning of the words or phrases is not always the same, when used in different statutes relating to different subjects."
See, also, State ex rel., etc., v. Roberts,
So, also, in Board of Revenue of Jefferson County v. City of Birmingham,
So, then, the question arises as to the legislative intent in the use of the word "street" in the above-cited act, here under review. In determining the meaning of the word, not only should the language in which the word occurs be considered, but also the character of the subject with which it is connected. The difference between the public roads of a county and the streets of an incorporated town or city was well recognized by this court in McCain v. State,
In State ex rel. City of Birmingham v. Bd. of Revenue,
Section 2 of the act here under review provides for the election of a superintendent of public roads, and section 3 for *28 the employment of county convicts on any part of the work, and further stipulates that the superintendent of public roads shall be directly responsible for each and every road within the jurisdiction of the board. We think that the word "road," in this connection, was intended to embrace the thoroughfares both outside and inside of the city, for it would not seem reasonable that the Legislature would hold the superintendent responsible for thoroughfares outside but not those within the city, although under the control and supervision of the county authorities. This indicates, therefore, that the words "road" and "street" were used synonymously in the act.
Other sections of the act refer to the county road fund, the road tax, and the duty of certain persons to work the public roads, and, indeed, all the provisions of the act would indicate a legislative intent that the work be done as is customary and usual by the county authorities in keeping up the public thoroughfares or public roads ordinarily coming within the jurisdiction and control of the county. It is well known, of course, that the system of road work by the county authorities is not adaptable to the construction or maintenance of sidewalks in a city. That system applies to the working of public roads, and is of course adapted to the maintenance of that part of a street within a city which corresponds with the roadway used by vehicles. To hold that the act in question included sidewalks would therefore require the county authorities to adopt an entirely different system, would relieve the city of liability for defects in the sidewalks without imposing any liability therefor on the county, and render nugatory the power of the city, given by statutes, to improve the sidewalk by levying assessments upon the abutting property owners. Indeed, it would work a most radical change, and one which we are persuaded was not within the legislative intent by the enactment of this statute. Public thoroughfares within the city are ordinarily known as streets, and it was but natural, therefore, that these thoroughfares should be designated as "streets," so as to distinguish them from that part of the road which lies outside of the city limits.
The Legislature was speaking to the question of public thoroughfares in the county of Mobile, and certain other public thoroughfares within the city of Mobile, and we are persuaded that in using the word "street" it was intended merely to identify those thoroughfares within the city, and otherwise the words "road" and "street" were used synonymously. Therefore, when the language of the act is considered, as well as the subject with which it is connected, we are persuaded that the word "street," as there used, was not intended to include sidewalks, but that the sidewalks of the streets named in the act still remain under the control and supervision of the city of Mobile, and as a consequence responsibility and liability for defects therein still rests upon the city.
It results that the judgment appealed from will be here affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and BROWN, JJ., concur.