24 Wis. 270 | Wis. | 1869
The complaint does not charge that the snow which had fallen and was suffered to remain
If, however, ice or snow is suffered to remain upon a sidewalk hi such an uneven and rounded form that a person cannot walk over it, using due care, without danger of falling down, that, it seems, does constitute a defect for which the city or town will be liable. Luther v. Worcester, 97 Mass. 268; Hutchins v. Boston, id. 272. See likewise Hull v. Lowell, 10 Cush. 260; Shea v. Lowell, 8 Allen, 136; Payne, v. Lowell, 10 id. 147; Providence v. Clapp, 17 How. 164.
As to the other charge in the complaint, that the gutter was permitted to become and remain so filled and obstructed by divers'substances that it could not, and did not, carry off the water which was pumped from the river upon the street above it, by the wrongful use of the steam fire engines, but that the same was thereby forced from the gutter, and caused to flow across the
By the Qourt. — Order reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.