38 P.2d 95 | Kan. | 1934
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from a defect in a state highway. The trial court overruled a demurrer to the petition, and defendant has appealed.
The material allegations of the petition, aside from formal matters, may be summarized as follows: That the state highway commission had placed crushed stone on the dirt shoulder of a state highway, the driveway of which was paved with concrete; that vehicles using the highway had edged off the concrete slab and onto the crushed stone on the shoulder and back onto the concrete slab and in so doing had scattered some of the crushed rock from the shoulder onto the slab. These rocks on the slab were further scattered and some of them crushed into gravel by traffic. These individual pieces of rock varied in size and shape, but averaged approximately two and one-fourth inches in length and two inches in thickness. Gravel brought on the concrete slab in this way consisted of particles of varied size ranging from one-half inch thick and three-fourths of an inch to an inch and one-half in length, which were scattered irregularly along the path of traffic on the concrete slab. This accumulation of loose rock and gravel was about ten pieces to the square yard, in some places being more numerous'
Appellant contends the petition does not state a cause of action, for two reasons: (1) That the stone or gravel on the concrete slab, as described in the petition, does not constitute a defect in the highway within the meaning of the law; and (2)'the stone and gravel on the highway were not the proximate cause, or legal cause, of the injury which plaintiff sustained, but that there was an independent intermediate cause, namely, the action of the other automobile in picking up the gravel or stone and throwing it into the car in which plaintiff was riding.
We need consider but the first of these questions. Gravel, or small stone, on a highway, is so common that to hold the highway commission liable for an injury resulting therefrom, as described in this petition, would be to make the maintenance of state highways prohibitive. Since but one small stone injured plaintiff, to enable him to recover we would have to hold that one such stone on the highway rendered it defective within the meaning of the law; and to keep paved highways from being defective would require that they be swept frequently. The legislature never intended to place such a duty on the state highway commission. Indeed, it is authorized to gravel the surface of state highways, and many miles of it in this state are so treated. We feel compelled to hold that the petition does not allege facts showing the highway was defective within the meaning of our statute (R. S. 1933 Supp. 68-419).
The judgment of the court below is reversed, with directions to sustain the demurrer to the petition.