delivered the opinion of the Court:
The questions presented by this record arise out of the ruling of the circuit court on the special pleas of the defendant, appellant here. There are two of these, by the first of which, responsibility is sought to be thrown on the contractor who made the sewer.
That the city may not be liable, within the meaning of the rule respondeat superior, for the acts of its contractors or their workmen while engaged in effecting a lawful object, is not the question here. The question is, was there a duty resting upon the city, growing out of, the franchises conferred upon it, to keep its public streets in a safe condition for the passage of travelers and others having occasion to use them. That there was, is established by the charter bestowing the franchises, the sixth clause of the fifth article of which gives to the city exclusive control and power over its streets, alleys and’ highways, and to put drains or sewers therein; and by the seventh clause of the same article, full power is given it to construct, regulate and keep in repair bridges, culverts and sewers, sidewalks and cross-ways, and to regulate the construction and use of the same.
It is a necessary corollary, from these premises, that a party receiving damage from neglect of this duty, is entitled to his action. Clayburgh v. The City of Chicago,
But it is quite unnecessary to argue the question presented by this plea, as the matters contained in it have so often been held by this court to constitute no defense. Lesher et al. v. The Wabash Navigation Co.,
Decisions to the same effect are found in Story v. City of Utica,
The only case conflicting with those cited by appellant, is Painter v. The City of Pittsburgh,
The third plea brings up this clause in the charter of the city:
“ That the city of Springfield shall not be liable for any damages or injury arising from the bad condition of the streets, alleys or highways of the city, by reason of the neglect of the proper officer of said city to repair the same, until the supervisor of said city shall have been notified thereof, and shall have failed to repair the same within a reasonable time after such notice.”
Laying out of view all consideration of the propriety of such a clause, and its inconsistency with other provisions of the charter, and with established rules of law, it is very manifest it cannot apply to this case. There is no charge in this declaration of negligence in not keeping the street in repair, but for permitting a work to be carried on in a street, dangerous in itself, without proper safeguards, and which they neglected to supply. The injury complained of was not the result of a defective street, which a traveler upon it might have noticed and reported, but for permitting the sewer in it to be excavated in a manner hazardous to the safety of the people.
The pleas being bad, neither of them presenting any defense to the action, judgment for the plaintiff on the demurrer, was the proper judgment, and no evidence of the facts contained in them was admissible.
There being no error in the record, the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
