149 P. 138 | Okla. | 1916
Plaintiff in error will be designated as defendant, and defendant in error as plaintiff, in accord with their respective titles in the trial court. The essential facts, when not stated, will be understood from the propositions discussed and the conclusions thereon reached in this opinion. The plaintiff recovered judgment for $15,000 for personal injuries.
A municipal corporation must exercise ordinary care to keep its sidewalks in reasonably safe condition for their ordinary proper use (Town of Norman v. Teel,
When a municipal corporation has, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have had, actual knowledge that the sidewalk is not in a reasonably safe condition — that is, when it has actual or constructive knowledge thereof — it is in duty bound to exercise ordinary care (including action within a reasonable time, and when reasonably required, as to barriers or warning signals, or both, to prevent injury to rightful users in the meantime) to make the same reasonably safe. A breach of duty in this respect proximately resulting in injury to one in the rightful use of the sidewalk, who is not shown to be guilty of contributory negligence, is actionable negligence. See, besides the cases cited supra, the following authorities: 4 Dillon, Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.) secs. 1665, 1712, 1717-1719; 28 Cyc. 1358-1365; notes to Elem v. Mr. Sterling,
That, except when the sidewalk has been rendered unsafe by the direct act, order, or authority of the municipal corporation, it is not liable for an unsafe condition of the same of which it has no notice, actual or constructive, will be seen from an examination of the foregoing authorities, particularly the following: Town of Norman v. Teel, supra; Cityof Guthrie v. Finch, supra. Also see Town of Fairfax v. Giraud,
The overruling of a general demurrer to the plaintiff's petition, asking damages for personal injuries alleged to have proximately resulted from an unsafe condition of defendant's sidewalk, is assigned as error by the defendant; it being contended that the following allegations in the petition do not charge it with actual or constructive notice, nor with any notice of the condition of the sidewalk:
"That said defendant, not regarding its duty in that behalf, * * * unlawfully and negligently suffered an opening * * * in said sidewalk, * * * and * * * wrongfully and negligently suffered said sidewalk to be and remain in bad and unsafe repair and condition by then and there wrongfully and negligently suffering said opening in said sidewalk to be and remain open ad unguarded in the nighttime * * * with no warning thereat. * * *"
As actionable negligence arises only upon a breach of duty, and the duty itself does not arise until the municipality has knowledge, actual or constructive, that the sidewalk is not reasonably safe, the foregoing allegations clearly and necessarily imply that the defendant had such notice, and the court did not err in overruling the demurrer. The case ofTown of Sallisaw v. Ritter, supra, and the case of City ofGuthrie v. Finch, supra, show that such an allegation is sufficient, as against a general demurrer, although the question did not arise upon a demurrer in the latter case.
As to whether the city had actual notice, or as to whether *509 there are facts constructively equivalent to notice, is ordinarily for the jury to determine. Town of Norman v. Teel,supra.
Notice of such unsafe condition must be through some officer or agent of the city, whose duty, in some way, relates to the care of its streets. 28 Cyc. 1397-1399; Town of Norman v. Teel,supra; City of Savanna v. Trusty,
When any such officer is so authorized specifically in respect to the known danger of an excavation for a building in the course of construction alongside a sidewalk, or in respect to the erection and maintenance of a fence on the line between such excavation and the sidewalk, and such authorization contemplates his constant vigilance or frequent observation and report, or other constant or frequent preventative action, he should ordinarily be deemed to be similarly authorized in respect to an obvious danger that lies in a cleft or cavity in said sidewalk casually connected with such excavation, and which is about 3 1/2 feet wide and extends from a depth of about 4 feet at the point of intersection with such excavation to a depth of about 3 1/2 feet at a point on said sidewalk about 2 feet from said excavation and about 16 or 18 inches onto the paved portion of said sidewalk; and notice to such officer of such cleft or cavity in said sidewalk would ordinarily be notice to the city.
However, in view of the state of the question as presented by the brief and the conclusion we have reached upon a proposition next hereafter to be discussed, we will not critically consider the *510 question as to whether there was sufficient evidence of notice, actual or constructive, to take the case to the jury; but we will assume, without deciding, that there was.
It may be well to incidentally state at this point that the parties engaged in constructing the building and who made the excavation alongside the sidewalk at the close of the day's work placed a keg in a part and a light board over another part of the cleft or cavity into which the plaintiff stepped and fell during the following night; but the board, at least, had in some unknown way been removed in the meantime, and, if the defendant had notice of the condition of the sidewalk, it appears that it would be for the jury to say whether this placing of the keg and board was a reasonable precaution against the danger of injury from such cleft or cavity. The defendant, it would seem, as between itself and users of the sidewalk, was primarily bound to use reasonable precaution against such danger, if it had notice; but, of course, a precautionary measure taken by the parties who placed the keg and board should be imputed to the defendant.
We come now to consider the assignment of error upon the following instruction given by the court to the jury:
"While you are instructed that the burden is upon the plaintiff to establish his case by a preponderance of the evidence, you are also instructed that if the plaintiff in the first instance established, by a preponderance of the evidence, negligence on the part of the defendant, then and in that event the burden shifts to the defendant, and it will be incumbent upon the defendant to disprove negligence on its part by a preponderance of the evidence, and if the defendant fails by such preponderance to disprove negligence on its part you should find for the plaintiff."
The petition was the ordinary petition for damages resulting from negligence in respect to the condition of defendant's sidewalk; and the answer consisted of a general and particular denials, and allegations having the effect of such denials, with allegations of contributory negligence. The issue being thus *511 made by the pleadings, the instruction appears to have been prejudicially erroneous.
The burden of proof, or, in other words, of going ahead with the evidence, to prevent an adverse ruling or action by the judge upon a question of law, as, for illustration, upon a demurrer, or motion, or in giving or refusing an adverse instruction involving the question of who has the burden, with its resultant effect upon the verdict of the jury in some instances, may often shift from one party to the other during the trial; but the burden of proof as it affects the duty of the jury in respect to its action upon the different possible states of its own belief as to essential affirmative allegations put in issue by mere denials, or, in other words, the risk of the jury's mere nonbelief, never shifts, but remains with the party who has it in the first instance; and in the event of the jury's nonbelief, even though it does not positively disbelieve the plaintiff's allegations, the verdict should be for the defendant. 4 Wigmore on Evidence, secs. 2485-2489; 2 Modern Law of Evidence (Chamberlayne) secs. 938-941; Jones on Evidence (2d Ed.) sec. 177; Standard MarineIns. Co. v. Traders' Compress Co.,
This instruction, in effect, erroneously requires the defendant to adduce a preponderating quantity of evidence to defeat any prima facie case that may be established by the evidence for the plaintiff, while under the law it was also entitled to a verdict upon adducing a quantity merely equal in effect upon the belief of the jury to that supporting suchprima facie case, assuming that the effect of plaintiff's evidence made it necessary for the defendant to adduce any evidence to prevent an adverse verdict. In other words, if the plaintiff did adduce evidence sufficient to establish his right to recover, the defendant was not bound to adduce a sufficient quantity to outweigh and turn the scales against the plaintiff's evidence, but was entitled to prevail, even if it adduced only a sufficient quantity to weigh equally against *512 the same and thus balance the scales, as the plaintiff has the risk of loss in case of the jury's nonbelief, as well as in case of its positive disbelief, of his evidence.
After all the evidence is in, in respect to the issue as to defendant's negligence, that which makes or tends to make a case for the plaintiff is weighed against that which is to the contrary; and if, upon considering all the evidence, it fails to preponderate in favor of the plaintiff, the verdict should be for the defendant.
For the reasons stated, this case should be reversed and remanded for another trial.
By the Court: It is so ordered.