107 Ga. 347 | Ga. | 1899
Baker sued the City of Rome for damages alleged to have been received on account of personal injuries. The
The°jury having returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, which has been approved by the trial judge in his refusal to grant a new trial, and no complaint being made that any error of law was committed at,the trial, it is incumbent upon us to determine from the facts stated above whether the defendant has been guilty of any negligence resulting in injury to the plaintiff; and if so, whether the plaintiff by the exercise of ordinary care could have avoided the consequences resulting to him from the negligent act of the defendant. It is not pretended that the plank on which the plaintiff attempted to walk was placed in the position in which he found it by the city authorities to be used by pedestrians going from the sidewalk to the street below. There is no evidence showing who placed the plank in the position to be so used. It is contended, however, that after it was so placed it was so continuously used by persons going along the sidewalk that a sufficient time had elapsed for a presumption to arise that the city authorities had knowledge that the plank, no matter by whom provided, was being constantly used by those who had occasion to use the crossing; and that, such use being known to the city authorities, the public had a right to presume that it had been placed there by the city to be used by pedestrians, and was therefore of a character suitable to be used for that purpose. If the city authorities would have a right, under any circumstances, to impose upon the public such a contrivance as a part of one
The city authorities have a right to lay out sidewalks, and when so laid out it is their duty to see that they are kept in a reasonably safe condition for travel. But in laying out a sidewalk and in declaring what is a sidewalk they are not given the arbitrary power to say that any contrivance which suits their whim or caprice is a sidewalk'.1 If the contrivance declared to he a sidewalk is so manifestly unsuited for such use that it would
Judgment reversed.