27 Minn. 243 | Minn. | 1880
The defendant is an incorporated village, possessing the powers in respect to streets and sidewalks usually vested in municipal corporations. Humphrey street, one of the principal streets of the village, runs east and west, and is 60 feet wide. At one place, for a considerable distance, there is a depression of several feet in the original surface of the ground over which the street runs. Through this depression and along the south side of the street, the village authorities had, by filling in, raised the surface and constructed a wagon road 20 or 25 feet in width, and on the same side had made a sidewalk. Along this made road and sidewalk the travel at that part of the street mostly passed. Nothing had been done by the authorities to improve the north half of the street through this depression. In this depression on the north side of the street, a Mr. Humphrey, in the spring of 1878, erected a store; the front, 20 feet wide, being on the
In the fall of 1878, in the evening, plaintiff was at the store on business, and upon coming out walked or fell off the end of the platform, injuring himself seriously. To recover for this injury he brings suit against the village. The court is of opinion that a municipal corporation which knowingly permits a structure to be made or to remain in a public street, is liable to one who, without his fault, and while in the proper use of the street, sustains injury from the presence of such structure in the Btreet; that if the structure be of itself a nuisance, dangerous to those using the street, it is the duty of the corporation, having notice, to remove it; (Cleveland v. City of St. Paul, 18 Minn. 279;) that if it be not in and of itself a nuisance, but is placed in the street to be used by the public as a part of it, it is the duty of the corporation permitting it to remain, and to be so used, to see that it is in safe condition for the public to use it as a part of the street; and
That the plaintiff knew before the injury the unsafe condition of the platform, was evidence of negligence on his part in not avoiding injury from such condition, but did not conclusively establish it. Upon that fact, and the other circumstances of the case, it was for the jury to determine if the plaintiff was negligent.
Order affirmed.