Conner v. City of Nevada

188 Mo. 148 | Mo. | 1905

YALLIANT, J.

The substance of the plaintiff’s petition is that, on the night of July 17,1901, while she was walking along one of the public streets of the defendant city exercising ordinary care, she fell into a hole that defendant had negligently allowed to be in the street; and received severe personal injuries. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for three thousand dollars from which defendant appealed.

I. The first point presented in the brief of appellant is that under the terms of sections 11 ánd 12 of article 10 of the Constitution, the defendant, a city of the third class, is not liable in this kind of an action. The proposition is that section 11 puts a limit on the rate of taxes that may be levied in such cities for city purposes, and section 12 puts a limit on the amount of indebtedness which the city may incur, forbidding the incurring in one year indebtedness to an extent in the aggregate beyond the revenue to be derived from the taxes of that year. The argument is that the tax rate was limited to produce only sufficient revenue to meet the necessary expenses of the city, and the incurring of all liability beyond that was forbidden, and that this, by necessary implication, makes it unlawful for the city to incur liability for its acts of negligence, because liability of that kind is indefinite and in a sense unlimited.

Appellant concedes that in numerous cases that have come before the courts of this State since cities have been limited by the Constitution in their power to incur indebtedness, they have been held liable in dam*153ages when they have wrought injury by neglect of duty, but insists that the courts in so holding have passed in silence over the point now. raised and that it has not been decided.

The clause of the Constitution in question deals with the subject of incurring indebtedness which arises ex contractu and which is very different in its nature from suffering liability for a tort. The language of section 12 is that the city shall not be allowed to become indebted in any manner or for any purpose to an amount exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year without the assent of two-thirds of the voters thereof voting at an election to be held for that purpose. This language shows that it is indebtedness incurred by assent, agreement or contract. The word debt has a well recognized meaning in law distinguished from liability for damages. After a claim for damages is reduced to a judgment it becomes, in a technical sense, a debt, but it is a debt imposed by law, not one assumed by contract. What our Constitution aims to control is the action of the municipal corporation in the matter of contracting debts. For definition and discussion of the term “debt” see 13 Cycl. Law and Proc., pages 393 and following, and cases cited in the notes.

In 1 Smith on Mun. Corp., secs. 4, 5, 6, the author divides public corporations into two classes, municipal corporations and public quasi corporations, and to these he adds a third class, gwasi-public corporations. The first includes incorporated cities, towns and villages ; the second, counties, townships, school districts, etc., and the third railroad, grain elevator, telegraph companies, etc. The generic difference between the two first, the author says, lies in thp fact that cities, towns and villages are created at the request, or at least with the consent, of their members and for their benefit, while public quasi corporations are mere local subdivisions of the State created by the sovereign will, *154to exercise certain duties in aid of the State government, and inasmuch as the sovereign is not liable for neglect of duty the gwcssi-public corporation acting for the State is not liable unless, made so by statute, but that municipal corporations to whom are given certain powers to be exercised for the benefit of its inhabitants, in the doing of acts which the State does not do, are liable for the consequences of neglect of duty in the performance of those acts. The author also points out the distinction between acts of a municipal corporation in the discharge of its delegated governmental authority and these in the discharge of its ministerial duty, holding that in the first the city is not liable for dereliction, and in the second it is. In a note to the text, section 6, n. 20, the author says: “ The rule stated briefly seems to be, that where a municipal corporation acts for a purpose purely and essentially public — acts as an agent for the State,' and nothing more — the corporation is regarded as a part of the sovereign State, and cannot be sued for a tort, unless express permission by statute to bring such a suit has been given,. But where municipal corporations act, as private corporations, for the local benefit and advantage of their members, they are liable in tort just as a private corporation would be. ’'

In a very thoroughly-considered case on this subject the Supreme Court of Texas, after citing the leading authorities, English and American, shows that the accepted rule of law. is that for neglect of duty in a matter of the kind then under consideration (failure to keep a street in reasonably safe condition), the city is liable in an action óf tort, not by force of any statute, but by the common law. [City of Galveston v. Posnainsky, 62 Tex. 118.]

The distinction between municipal corporations and what are above referred to as public quasi corporations in respect of their liability for neglect of duty is *155pointed ont in 15 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), pp. 420, et seq.; also 2 Dillon on Mun. Corp. (4 Ed.), sec. 996, et seq.]

Reasoning along the lines above referred to we see that the liability of a city for allowing streets to remain so ont' of repair for an unreasonable time as to render them unsafe for use is a liability imposed by law; it does not depend on contract, it is not in the technical sense a debt. Then when we turn again to the clause in our Constitution on which appellant relies we see that it refers only to the contracting of debts, and makes no reference to liability fo.r torts, it leaves that matter as the common law left it.

In 20 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), p. 1173, it is said: “A city cannot escape liability from an obligation arising ex clelicto on the ground that its indebtedness has already reached the constitutional limit.” And in a note to the text the author cites: McCracken v. San Francisco, 16 Cal. 591; People ex rel. v. May, 9 Colo. 404; Bloomington v. Perdue, 99 Ill. 329; Chicago v. Sexton, 115 Ill. 230; Bartle v. Des Moines, 38 Iowa 414; Rice v Des Moines, 40 Iowa 638; Dallas v. Miller, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 503.

Thus it will be seen that the question now presented, although perhaps not heretofore expressly decided in this State, has received judicial consideration in other States which have similar constitutional limitations, and so far as the decisions have come to our notice they hold that for a neglect of duty of the kind now in question the city is liable even though it has reached the limit of its power to levy taxes and contract debts.

It is not necessary to refer to any of the many cases in which we have held cities, liable in such case without referring to the constitutional limitations referred-to, because, as the learned counsel say, the constitutional question was not discussed, but now that our attention is expressly called to it we see no reason to *156take back anything that we have heretofore said on the subject of the city’s liability for its negligence in failing to keep its streets in reasonably safe condition for use by the public. We hold that-there is nothing in our Constitution to limit that liability.

II. We come now to a consideration of the case on its merits.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove as follows:

The plaintiff, a married woman, was comparatively a stranger- in the city of Nevada. About two weeks before the accident, she was passing through the city and stopped to spend one night with a friend; the next morning she was driven by her friend’s husband in a buggy to the Union Depot along the street in which she afterwards met with the accident. Two weeks later she returned to the city, arriving at the Union Depot, July 17,1901, about 9 o’clock in the evening. She made inquiries of some persons standing at the depot for a conveyance of some kind to take her to her friend’s residence, but finding no such conveyance, she undertook to walk there.

The railroads passing the Union Depot on the east side run through the city north and south'; there are about nineteen tracks. The business part of the city lies west of the depot, but the corporate limits extend about a half mile east of the same. The streets leading east from the business part of the city towards the Union Depot terminate at the railroad tracks, except two, Locust street and Austin street, which, going east, cross the tracks and extend a half mile to the east limits of the city; at the east city limits, Austin street extended becomes the county road. Austin street is one block south of the Union Depot, and Locust street is four blocks north of Austin. People living in the city east of the railroad tracks had to use either Austin or Locust street in going to or from the principal part of *157the city or the Union Depot. At the date in which we are now interested, Austin street was and had been for many years an open public thoroughfare. The city had caused it to be graded, gutter ditches on the sides made, and raised in the middle for a wagon road. On the north side of the street the city had constructed for a sidewalk a cinder path, but with wear and lack of repair it had become unfit for use, and the public, walking along the street, had fallen into the habit of walking along the north side of the wagon track, and a beaten’ path for pedestrians was well marked there by use.' This path was on the south side of the gutter ditch, which had separated the cinder path from the wagon road. Some years before this accident the city had by ordinances granted one of the railroad companies a license to lay two switch tracks across the street about 250 feet east of the depot, and the railroad company-in its construction had made a wooden culvert under its tracks, extending beyond them five feet east, to carry off the water which came down a ditch along the west side of the switch tracks. At the east end of this culvert a hole had washed out about four feet deep and four or five feet wide, and had been there for several months before the accident. The beaten path above mentioned led directly across the switch tracks to this hole; the hole lay right in the way of one walking along the path. The people who knew of its existence were in the habit of following the path until the hole was reached and then turning to the right.

This was the condition of the street oh the night when the plaintiff landed at the Union Depot and started to walk to the residence of her friend, and this street was the most direct route for her to take.

The plaintiff, with a two-year-old infant in her arms and a four-year-old infant holding her hand and walking by her side, went from the Union Depot to Austin street, crossed the railroad tracks, and -then took the footpath above described, and followed it on *158and across the switch tracks and on until it led her into this hole, into which she fell and received very severe injuries; her left leg was broken, her left ankle dislocated, and she was otherwise hurt.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony defendant asked an instruction to the effect that plaintiff was not entitled to recover, which the court refused, and exception was taken.

The plaintiff on her cross-examination had testified that in October following the accident, while her leg was yet in the plaster cast and the broken bone not united, she was riding with her husband in a vehicle when a wheel broke down and her broken leg received a jar and the broken joint slipped a little, but that it did not break again. Defendant’s testimony on this point tended to prove that she had told the physician, whom she called to examine the injured limb and who took off the old and put on a new plaster cast, that she had broken her leg over again in that buggy accident.

Defendant now insists that the instruction calling for a nonsuit should have been given, first,' because there was no legal evidence to show that this was a public street; second, there was no legal evidence to show that the street commissioners, under whose direction the street had been improved, were legal officers of the city, and, third, the plaintiff’s own evidence showed that she was guilty of contributory negligence.

The first two of these grounds also appear in the *159record in the form of objections to the evidence and also in instructions refused.

1. The evidence on the part of the plaintiff to show that this was a public street which the city was in duty bound to keep in repair, was that it had for many years been used by the public as a street; it had been graded and ditched and sidewalked (with cinders) by the city, under the immediate supervision and direction of the city street commissioner; the city by ordinances had granted the railroad company the license under which the switch tracks had been laid and the culvert constructed, but the evidence did not show an ordinance under which the street commissioner did the work. Appellant now says that in the absence of an ordinance authorizing the work to be done there is no legal evidence that the city assumed jurisdiction over the street or that the city officers were acting within the scope of their duties when they did the work.' Appellant relies on Downend v. Kansas City, 156 Mo. 60, to sustain that contention. But appellant does not have the correct conception of that case.' The only evidence in that case offered to prove that the alleged street was a public street was that the city council had approved a plat of the proposed addition in which this was shown as a street, and the public had, for a time not specified, made some use of it. There was no evidence that any city officer had taken any authority over it or that any work had been done on it by the city. The court held that the approval of the plat did not impose on the city the duty to take charge of the street, and that the mere user by the public, as shown by the evidence, did not make it a public street which the city was bound to improve or keep in repair. On the contrary, the court in that case refers with approval to Baldwin v. Springfield, 141 Mo. 205, wherein, at page 212, speaking in regard to the obligation of the city to keep the streets in repair, it is said: “The latter obligation does not attach until the corporation, in some official and appro*160priate manner, has invited or sanctioned its nse as a street by the public. But such sanction may be given by acts of its proper officers as well as by acts in the form of ordinances.”

See, also, Buschmann v. St. Louis, 121 Mo. l. c. 537.

The acts of the city street commissioners in the case at bar in causing the work of street construction that was done were sufficient to invite the public to use it as a public street and sufficient to justify the finding that it was a public street.

2. The second proposition is that the evidence that these men. who at different times occupied the office of street commissioner were street commissioners was incompetent to prove them such. The evidence was that of the men themselves who as witnesses testified that at the several dates mentioned they respectively held the office of street commissioner and did this work in that capacity.

' Parol proof that a certain act appertaining to a particular public ‘office was done by a man in possession of the office and acting in the capacity of such officer is competent evidence to show prima facie that the act was official. [Eads v. Wooldridge, 27 Mo. 251.]

3. There is no evidence tending to show that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. When she landed at the depot at 9 o’clock in the evening she made some inquiry for a vehicle, but none was there. What then could .she do other than what she did? Or if, with the assistance of the retrospect, we can now think of something else that she might have done, can we say that what we now see would have been a better course, was then and there so obviously the only prudent thing to do that there can be no doubt about it? As we now see it, it would have been far better if she had sat in the waiting room at the Union Depot all night, but we are not to judge of her acts in the light of the subsequent occurrence, but in that of her then *161surroundings. She walked down the street holding one infant in her arms and the other by the hand, trusting, as she had a right to trust, that the city had done its duty in keeping its street in a reasonably safe condition, and thus she walked on in the dark or the dim light until she fell into this pit.

The court did not err in refusing the instruction for a nonsuit.

4. The court refused the following instruction asked by. the defendant:

. “2. Although the jury may believe from the evidence that plaintiff’s injuries are of a permanent character, so as to incapacitate her to enjoy life or cause her to suffer pain, yet if the jury are unable to determine from the testimony whether such injuries are made permanent by the new injury.to plaintiff’s limb, or the original injury or both injuries combined, then you will not allow any damage on account of said injuries being permanent. ”

The court at the request of the defendant gave the following instruction:

‘ ‘ 10. If the jury should find for .the pi aintiff,. then they should assess only such damages as she sustained on account of her fall in the street on the 17th day of July, 1901, and should not allow damages for any aggravation or increase of said injury caused by plaintiff’s neglect of, or imprudence in using, her injured limb, or by any new injury to said limb, if any be shown by the evidence.”

• These two instructions were aimed at that part of the evidence that related to the alleged second injury to the plaintiff’s leg. "Whilst it was the duty of the plaintiff to have used reasonable care to promote a recovery, yet if she was guilty of no negligence in this respect and an accident happened to her in which the result was more serious because of her then condition than it would have been if she had not already been *162afflicted, such, more serious result in reality becomes the result of the first accident. There was nothing to indicate that the plaintiff was imprudent in this respect; the accident occurred by the breaking down of the wheel of the vehicle, but for which there would have been no jar, and but for the already broken and yet unnnited bone in her leg the jar would have produced no ill effect. The case does not call for a decision as to whether or not defendant was entitled to instruction numbered 10, which the court gave at defendant’s request; therefore, we make no decision on that point. But if the defendant was entitled to have the consequences of that accident subtracted from the consequences of "the first injury in the estimation of the damages, it got all that it was entitled to by force of instruction 10. There was no error in refusing instruction numbered 11.

5. The last insistence is that the damages assessed are excessive.

The testimony showed that the largest bone in the left leg was broken, it was an oblique break, and in consequence the plaintiff had been bedridden the most of the time until the trial, which was ten months after the accident and. she was then still suffering and the expert testimony was that it would always give her trouble. Her anide was also injured. The jury assessed her damages at $3,000, and we see no reason to complain of the award.

There are other points made in the brief of appellant relating to the giving and refusing of instructions but they all come back to rest on the propositions above discussed and we see no' propriety in lengthening out this opinion to discuss the instructions seriatim. There is no error in the giving or refusing of instructions of which the defendant has any cause to complain. The judgment is affirmed.

All concur, except Brace, P. J., absent.