180 Iowa 378 | Iowa | 1916
I. Something like 15 years ago, the defendant telephone company, acting under a license or permission from the defendant town, constructed its telephone system over and along the streets of the town, and erected its poles and wires along the south side of Third Street therein. As a part of this system, it constructed the guy wire in question, which was attached to poles, one standing at or near the northeast corner of Third and Calhoun Streets in said town, and the other in the parking nearly in front of the property in which plaintiff lived at the time of the accident, the said property being a corner lot, or lots, bounded on one side by Third Street and on the other by Calhoun. Third Street runs east and west, and Calhoun Street, north and south. There ivere no sidewalks around plaintiff’s property at the time the accident happened, but there was a pathway running east and west along the north side of the property. This ivas kept free from snow during the winter preceding plaintiff’s accident, but neither the plaintiff nor any of the members of the family used this pathway, for the reason that the north door of the house was closed and boarded up as a protection from the cold winds of the winter. This door was opened, however, about a week prior to the accident. Before the opening of this door, the south door of the house was the only one which was used. One desiring to leave the house used this south door; thence proceeded in a westerly direction toward the corner of the lot, and thence westerly again on the street.
Plaintiff and her husband moved into the property December 18, 1913, and were occupying the same on April 2G,
On April 26, 1914, plaintiff’s husband drove his auto to his home, stopping it on the side of the street nearest
That she could not say whether she looked to see whether there were any obstructions or not; that she did look to see if there were any limbs of the trees in her way; that she' was not expecting any obstructions and was not certain as to whether she had looked to see whether there were any overhead obstructions or not; that she was watching the children as she left her house for the automobile, and did not look particularly for any obstructions; that she was attracted by the passing of an automobile, which passed on the north side of her husband’s car; and that, for the most part, her attention was directed to her children, as .they were entering the car, and to obstructions which might lie along the surface of the ground, but not to obstructions such as the guy wire in question.
To sustain the ruling of the trial court, it is argued that, under the testimony, plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in not looking out for and discovering the wire as she proceeded toAvard the auto. It is also contended that plaintiff’s action is bottomed, not upon negligence, but upon the theory that the guy wire was a nuisance, and that there was no nuisance, because the town officials having charge of the matter legalized the nuisance and expressly authorized the erection and maintenance of the guy wire. Counsel also suggest that, even if the action be for negligence, that claim is out of the case because of the license or permission granted by the town officials to the telephone company to construct its poles, wires, etc., in the street.
“That the defendant telephone company, more than a year prior to the institution of this suit, created a nuisance and maintained said nuisance for more than, a year last past, said nuisance consisting of swinging and maintaining a line of wire on the north side of said lot facing on Third .Street, or on the south side of the street and adjacent to said lot, said wire extending a distance of about 150 feet, one end of which was fastened to a pole, said fastening being at a distance of about 4 feet from the ground, and the other end of said wire being fastened to another pole at a distance of about 20 feet from the ground. * * * The plaintiff avers that the defendants, separately, jointly and concurrently, acted in a willful, negligent and improper manner, in erecting, stretching, tying and maintaining said wire in the manner above described, and keeping the same in said condition for said period and length of time.”
Along with these are allegations of plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence. These allegations, it seems to us, charge not only nuisance, but negligence, and it is to be noted that defendants are a little inconsistent in their arguments. If the action is bottomed on nuisance pure and simple, the question of contributory negligence is out of the case; for, as a rule, if the action is not bottomed on negligence, there can, strictly speaking, be no contributory
“The primary and general use of a highway is for travel, and any obstruction that renders it dangerous or unsafe for that purpose is unlawful; and, although a telephone company may have the right to occupy a highway with its poles, yet if it secures them in the highway by guy wires so as to endanger the public travel, or the safety of individuals in the reasonable and ordinary use of the highway, such method of securing and maintaining its poles is an obstruction, and the law declares that such an obstruction is a nuisance, and the act of maintaining such a nuisance, negligence.”
In Kent v. City of Harlan, supra, we said:
“We have held that hitching posts upon a street, authorized by the proper authorities, are not a nuisance per se (citing cases). It does not follow, however, that they may not be a nuisance in fact, under the facts of a given case. If a nuisance in fact, no• authority is conferred upon the city to maintain them as such.”
See, also, Mosheuvel v. District of Columbia, 48 L. Ed. (U. S.) 170.
Something is said in argument to the effect that there is no testimony that the nuisance or negligence was the proximate cause of the injury. We do not go into that question, for it was manifestly one for the jury. As to the liability of the defendant city, there was enough to take that question to the jury, under the doctrine announced in Wheeler v. City, supra.
The case should, we think, have been submitted to the