50 Wis. 375 | Wis. | 1880
1. Walworth avenue, including the footway thereon from which the plaintiff fell, was a public street in fact, and had been long recognized as such by the defendant village through its legally constituted officers or agents. It was not necessary to prove by record evidence that the board of trustees of the village had formally adopted or recognized the footway as a public way, in order to hold the village liable for damages resulting from defects therein. After allowing it to be used continuously for many yeai’s as a public way, and after assuming charge of it as such, evidenced by the expenditure of money and labor upon it under the supervision and direction of the proper village officers, the village cannot now be heard to allege that it has never formally adopted it by recorded l’eso-lution or vote. The court so instructed the jury. Such has been the settled law of this state ever since Codner v. Bradford, 3 Pin., 259, was decided — nearly thirty years ago. For a full discussion of the subject see Houfe v. Fulton, 34 Wis., 608, and the cases there cited.
2. We greatly doubt whether, under the charter of the defendant village, the expense of building or repairing a side
We also greatly doubt whether the charter imposes the
The propositions above suggested are not here determined, for .the reason that we have reached the conclusion that the railing, the absence of which caused the plaintiff to fall from the footway, is not a part of such way in any sense which will operate to charge the abutting lots with the expense of constructing it or keeping it in repair. This conclusion necessarily results from the strict rule of construction which, as we have seen, must be applied to the charter provision, as well as from the obvious fact that the railing was as much for the protection of teams as footmen.- The footway, being on a level with the street, or perhaps below it, was evidently an insufficient barrier to prevent teams going off the embankment, and it may. well be that the railing was of greater utility in securing the safety of travelers in vehicles than of footmen. So, if it be conceded that the plaintiff owned the abutting lot and was primarily bound to keep the footway in repair, and that his lot could lawfully be charged with the expense of repairing it, still, under the circumstances of this case, we must hold that the defendant’s charter imposes no such obligation upon him, or charge upon his lot, in respect to the railing.
It follows that the proof of plaintiff’s title to the abutting land, offered on behalf of defendant, was entirely immaterial, and was properly rejected by the court.
3. The remaining errors assigned are based upon exceptions to the charge of the court to the jury, and the refusal by the court to give certain instructions proposed on behalf of the defendant. The questions whether the accident was caused by the alleged defect in the walk or street, and whether the plaintiff, when injured, was in the exercise of ordinary car'e and caution, were fairly submitted to the jury. An accurate
The court refused to instruct the jury, as proposed on behalf of the defendant, that a slight want of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff would defeat the action. In Otis v. Janesville, 47 Wis., 422, which was also an action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by a defect in a highway, a judgment for the plaintiff was reversed because the court below refused to give a similar instruction. In that case, however, there was very convincing proof that the plaintiff, or, what is the same thing, the driver of the team after w'hich she was riding, was guilty of very great negligence, which contributed directly to the injuries complained of. Besides, the court instructed the jury that slight negligence of the driver would not defeat the action, without explaining the recognized distinction between slight negligence and a slight want of ordinary care. Under these circumstances we thought the jury might have been misled by the instruction given, and that had the above distinction been pointed out to them, as it would have been had the proposed instruction been given, the verdict might have been for the defendant. But this case presents no such features. The evidence tending to show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff is quite weak and inconclusive, and the jury were not instructed that slight negligence on his part would not defeat the action.
It is true that in one part of the charge the learned circuit judge, as in Otis v. Janesville, said that want of ordinary care
We find nothing in the evidence or charge of the court leading us to believe that the instruction refused was necessary to prevent misapprehension by the jury of the law of the case, or its application to the facts proved.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
By the Court — Judgment affirmed.