7 Mo. App. 447 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff, a boy eleven years of age, sues for damages on
The defendant’s testimony tended to show that the bank was caused to fall by the boys digging into it, in which the plaintiff joined them ; that the plaintiff, at the time, was not using the street for purposes of travel, but only as a play-ground and for his own amusement; that the street was not in a condition to be used for vehicles ; and that the plaintiff had long resided in the neighborhood, and well knew the condition of the bank.
The city of St. Louis was joined as a co-defendant with the Vulcan Iron-Works. The verdict of the jury was for both defendants.
The court refused to give the following instruction, asked for by the plaintiff: —
“ The court instructs the jury that, in considering the question as to whether or not plaintiff contributed by his own act to cause the injury to himself mentioned in the petition, they,should take into consideration his age and discretion ; and if the jury find from the evidence that plaintiff was of the age of eleven years, and did not possess the discretion of an adult or grown person at the time of the
In view of the conflicting testimony, and the opposing theories of fact maintained by the parties touching the fall of the bank, we cannot- say that there was error in the refusal of this instruction as it stands. But, as the judgment must be reversed on other grounds, we think it not improper to remand the cause, with our views upon the question partially presented in the instruction.
If, as the defendants claim, the bank was left by the Vulcan Iron-Works in an entirely safe condition, and the digging into it by boys on the next day (whether the plaintiff participated or not) was the direct cause of the fall, then the age and capacity of the plaintiff are wholly immaterial to the question of the defendants’ liability. If the act of an infant bring disaster upon itself, there is no more responsibility on the owner or manager of the particular instrumentality, who is innocent of negligence in its use or exposure, than there would be if the person injured were of mature years. Such is substantially the theory of the defendants in the present case. If their hypothesis of fact were to be adopted by the jury, the instruction in question would be wholly out of place. The fault lies in its too general terms, which make it alike applicable to every hypothesis of fact in the case.
The plaintiff’s theory of fact appears to be that the employees of the Vulcan Iron-Works, by undermining and excavating sand, left the bank without sufficient support, so that it would be liable to fall, at any moment afterwards, from that cause alone; that the digging by the boys had no influence in causing the fall, or that, if it had any, it was utterly insignificant, and unworthy of consideration in connection with the direct and potential cause already present; that the plaintiff’s contributory negligence, if any,
On the application of defendant the City of St. Louis, the court gave 'two instructions, of which the substance appears in the following : —
“If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, Donoho, at the time he received the injuries complained of, was, in company with other boys, using Clay Street for the purpose of playing or amusing themselves thereon, and not for the purpose of passing over or travelling on said street, then, notwithstanding he was injured, he cannot recover against the City of St. Louis.”
It is a duty of municipal corporations to keep the streets in a reasonably safe condition for use by the public in travel and intercommunication between different parts of the city. From this duty results a responsibility for personal injuries caused by any failure to perform it. If a street be used for purposes wholly foreign to its legitimate objects, and injury results from a defective adaptation, or a non-adaptation to such purposes, there can be no such responsibility. Thus, if a circus-man or a juggler monopolizes a space in a public street for exhibiting his show, and while, so doing suffers an injury resulting from a defective construction of the highway, he cannot therefore have redress against the municipality. But the principle here involved must have reasonable interpretation. The street is for travel. But does it follow that every temporary suspension of actual locomotion shall suspend also, or destroy, the whole doctrine of municipal liability for failure-to perform a public duty?
Our attention is called to Stinson v. Gardiner, 42 Me. 248, and Blodgett v. City of Boston, 8 Allen, 237. In the .first-mentioned case it was decided that “when children
The important fact must be observed that all these decisions are placed upon an interpretation of statutory language. The statute requires the town to keep the highways in repair, so that they may be “ safe and convenient for travellers at all seasons of the year.” The word travel, or traveller, expresses in each case a distinct statutory limitation. The whole liability is measured by the statute, and cannot go beyond it. But in Missouri the liability, if any, rests upon general principles, applying to the municipal dereliction of a legal duty. The duty is inferred from the grant of an exclusive power to “construct and keep in repair all bridges, streets, sewers, and drains, and to regulate the use thereof,” etc. City Charter of St. Louis, art. 3, sect. 26. The use of the streets to be so con
If the plaintiff had abandoned his errand for the time being and was actually engaged' with the other boys in excavating the bank for amusement when the accident occurred, there might be room for an application of the doctrine that the city was no guarantor of the personal safety of one thus misusing the public thoroughfare. But if he was merely pausing in his errand because his attention was attracted for a moment to the occupation of his playmates, there can be no fairness in asserting that in that moment he was not properly on the highway, or using it for the purposes of. its creation. The instructions as given might well mislead the jury to this erroneous conclusion. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.