85 Ind. 130 | Ind. | 1882
The appellant sued the appellee for an injury sustained by his son, on Main street in the city of Aurora,, on the 30th day of November, 1880.
It is alleged in the complaint, that from the 1st day of November, 1880, until the 15th day of February, 1881, said Main street, extending from Fifth street to First street in said city, and crossed by Fourth, Third and Second streets in said city, was, during said time, between Fifth and Third streets,, covered with frozen snow and ice to the depth of five inches, rendering its surface smooth, even and sleek; that during said period large crowds, numbering one hundred persons, daily and nightly assembled on said Main street, between Fifth and Third streets in said city, with the knowledge of the appellee, and in the presence of its mayor, marshal and police officers, and engaged in the sport of sliding and coasting down Main street, over Fourth street, where the descent of Main street was very great, at the rate of forty miles per hour, thereby rendering said Main street and Fourth street,, where it crossed the same, dangerpus and unsafe for travel; that the plaintiff’s son, Benjamin Faulkner, a lad about seven years of age, was accustomed to j>ass along said Fourth street, over Main street, to and from the public school in said city, that being the most direct and convenient way to and from
“Article 4, section 2. Each officer of the city of Aurora shall faithfully do and perform the duties required .of him in his office by the act of incorporation and by the ordinances , and by-laws of the city and resolutions of the city council.
“Article 11, sec. 32. It shall be unlawful for any minor or other person or persons to throw stones, play ball, pitch quoits, or engage in any sport or do anything on any street or alley, within the city limits, tending to produce a bodily injury, or endanger the life or property of any person.
“Article 11, sec. — . Any person violating any provision of this article shall, upon conviction before the mayor or other competent jurisdiction, forfeit and pay to said city such penalty as may be assessed, not less than one nor more than one hundred dollars, with costs.”
The appellee demurred to the complaint, on the ground that it did not contain facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained. The appellant excepted, and, electing to standby his complaint, final judgment was rendered against him and in favor of the appellee, for costs.
The rendering of judgment against the appellant, and the sustaining of the demurrer to his complaint, are assigned as errors.
It is alleged in the complaint that the appellee had notice
That the occupation of one of the travelled streets of the appellee by coasters, in the manner stated in the complaint, would seriously interfere with the legitimate public use of the same, and endanger the safety of those rightfully travel-ling along and across it, hardly admits of a doubt. Such a use of the streets of a city is not only unauthorized and wrong, obut altogether inconsistent with the rights of the public.
“Highways,” says a recent writer of approved authority, “ are intended for, and devoted to, the purposes of public travel, and every person may exercise this right reasonably. But every unreasonable use of the same, whereby others are hindered, delayed or annoyed in a like reasonable use of the same, or in the rights incident thereto, is a nuisance. But whether a particular use, that is not a nuisance per se, is an unreasonable use and nuisance, is a question of fact, to be judged of from the circumstances of each case.” Wood Law of Nuisances, section 251.
Though the coasting on Main street, within the corporate limits of the appellee, as described in the complaint, constituted a nuisance, yet it could hardly be said that if one person should descend said street on a sled at a proper time and at a moderate rate of speed, though in sport and for pleasure merely, such use of the street would necessarily constitute a nuisance. Such a use of the street might not be inconsistent with its use by the public nor render it dangerous or unsafe for travel. A pei’son may drive his horse along the street at a reasonable rate of speed, even for pleasure, consistently with the use of the same by the public; but if he should drive his
It would be difficult, if not impossible, to suggest any ground upon which, consistently with the adjudged cases and the principles of law, the liability of the appellee for the injury complained of can rest. Those who injured the appel- . lant were in no way connected with the appellee; they acted upon their own volition, and carried on their sport for their own pleasure, not for the benefit of the appellee, nor at its instance. The wrong was theirs, not the appellee’s. The sport in which they were engaged was not necessarily a nuisance; it might have been carried ou innocently. Hutchinson v. Concord, 41 Vt. 271. Was it the duty of the appellee to watch the sport and determine, judicially and at its peril, when it ceased to be innocent and lawful and became dangerous and unlawful? And if it failed to discover the line separating between . innocence and wrong, is it to be held liable for such error of judgment? The determination of such a question is not only judicial in its character, but it must necessarily depend upon the actual facts in the particular ease. Wood Law of Nuisances, supra. To hold the appellee liable for errors of judgment upon such a question would be opposed to the decided weight of authority. Dillon Mun. Corp., section 32; Gale v. Kalamazoo, 23 Mich. 344 (9 Am. R. 80); Brimmer v. Boston, 102 Mass. 19.
In the case of Wilson v. Mayor, etc., 1 Denio, 595, it is held that where a duty, judicial in its nature, is imposed upon a corporation, it is not liable even for misconduct in its exercise.
In this case the appellee had, by ordinance, prohibited all persons from engaging in dangerous sports upon its streets.
The appellee, having, by the express terms of the statute, exclusive power over its streets, had authority, doubtless, by ordinance, to empower its officers to stop and suppress coasting upon its streets at once. But was it bound to do so ? If it deemed the ordinance referred to in the complaint sufficient to prevent coasting and other dangerous sports upon its streets, is it to be adjudged liable because it did not provide a more stringent, and, perhaps, a better and more efficient, remedy?. The law has confided to the legislative judgment and discretion of the common council of the appellee the power to enact ordinances. If, in the honest exercise of this power, the common council fails, through want of experience or defect of judgment, to establish such laws as are most completely and effectively adapted to the accomplishment of the end in view, the city is not liable. Dillon Mun. Corp., section 753, and cases there cited; Brinkmeyer v. City of Evansville, 29 Ind. 187. It could' only prevent or suppress such sports through its officers, and for their neglect, as we shall hereafter see, it is not liable.
We are aware that'the case of Marriott v. Mayor, etc., 9 Md. 160, is opposed to this conclusion, but we regard the case as exceptional and without support. Besides, by the express provisions of the charter of Baltimore, the city council had, at the time referred to in the opinion, power to declare what should constitute a nuisance, and to abate the same. The court held that it was the duty of the city council to declare by ordinance coasting on its streets to be a nuisance, and to prevent it; and that, for its failure to do so, it might at common law be liable to a party injured, without his fault, by coasters.
Without seriously complaining of the appellee for having
“ Unless there be'a valid contract creating, or a statute de-claring, the liability, a municipal corporation is not bound to provide for and secure a perfect execution of its by-laws, and it is not responsible in a civil action for the neglect of duty on the part’of its officers in respect to their enforcement, although .such neglect results in injuries to private persons which would otherwise not have happened.” A city is- not liable for the neglect of its marshal, its police officers or firemen appointed by it. Buttrick v. City of Lowell, 1 Allen, 172; Ready v. Mayor, etc., 6 Ala. 327 ; Schultz v. City of Milwaukee, 49 Vis. 254 (35 Am. R. 779); Levy v. Mayor, etc., 1 Sandf. 465, approved in Lorillard v. Town of Monroe,11 N. Y. 392; Griffin v. Mayor, etc., 9 N. Y. 456. But, aside from this view of the -case, wo think the appellee was not legally bound to prevent or abate the nuisance complained of by the appellant. In the ■case of Schultz v. Gity of Milwaukee, supra, which is precisely the case before us, the court says:
“ The coasting or sliding down Poplar street in the manner .and to the extent charged in the complaint was, while being indulged in, a grievous public nuisance, which the city authorities ought to have prevented or suppressed. -But this duty is a public or police, rather than a corporate, duty, in the performance of which the corporation, as such, ‘has no particular interest, and from which it derives no special benefit or advantage in its corporate capacity, but which it is bound to see
Public streets are for the public use, and the use is none the less for the public at large because they are situated within a municipality and subject to its supervision, and, for this reason, placing obstructions thereon is an indictable offence and may be restrained in equity. Dillon, secs. 519 and 520; Smith v. State, 3 Zab. 712; State, ex rel., v. Cincinnati, etc., Co., 18 Ohio St. 262.
In the case of Borough of Norristown v. Fitzpatrick, 94 Pa. St. 121 (39 Am. R. 771), it was held that a person injured by the discharge of a cannon by a crowd collected together on one-of the streets of the borough, which had been engaged in firing the cannon for amusement for some hours, was not entitled to recover from the village damages for such injury. Gordon, J., says:
“Admitting that a mob is a nuisance, and that of the' worst kind, nevertheless, it is one that a municipal corporation could not abate by the use of ordinary appliances such as suffice for the removal of natural or material obstructions in or near a highway; resort must, therefore, be had to the police force, but, as we have already seen, for the doings or misdoings of those who compose this force the municipality is not liable.”
In the case of Ray v. Manchester, 46 N. H. 59, and in the case of Hutchinson v. Concord, 41 Vt. 271, it was held that coasting on a highway is not a defect in a highway for which a city or town is liable. The same has been held in Massachusetts. Cole v. Newburyport, 129 Mass. 594 (37 Am. R.. 394); Shepherd v. Inhabitants of Chelsea, 4 Allen, 113.z
In the case of Hutchinson v. Concord, supra, the court says :
“ It is true that towns may be liable for damages by obstructions placed in the highway by others without any agency of the town or its officers, such as a log, wood, timber, or stone, if the town negligently suffers such obstructions to remain, exposing the traveller to danger. But in such ease the road, with such objects resting upon it, is thereby rendered insufficient or out of repair; and the town has the power to restore it to its proper condition. * * * But as to the boys with their sleds upon the road, it is quite different. It is not made unlawful by the statute, to travel upon the highway with such sleds, nor are the selectmen empowered to prohibit it. The selectmen are only empowered to prohibit one mode of use of such sleds, or like vehicles, upon the highway; that is, coasting; and then only when and whére, in their opinion,, the travelling public Is, or is likely to be, endangered by it.’r
It is insisted by the appellant, that the rule in Massachusetts and other New England States upon this subject is more limited than it is elsewhere. The statutes of Massachusetts and the other New England States provide that highways
It is held under this statute that anything in the condition of a high.way, which renders it unsafe or inconvenient for travel, is a defect or want of repair. It may be a hole in the highway, or it may consist of a stone or log or other obstacle left on its surface, or a post standing within its limits, or a barrier stretched across it, though not touching it; or it may be trees or walls standing by or upon it, and liable to fall and injure travellers; or it maybe an awning projecting over it. For a failure to remove any obstruction from the highway, or to repair it and to keep it in a condition to be reasonably safe for travel, the statute expressly makes the city or town in which the highway is located, liable for injuries resulting from obstructions or want of repair of such highway.
The law of Indiana and many other States gives to incorporated cities jurisdiction over the streets located within their limits, and the means necessary to keep them in repair and reasonably safe for travel. Hence, the duty to keep the streets reasonably fit and safe for public use is implied, and also the liability for a failure to discharge this duty. It would seem, therefore, that the law of Indiana upon the subject is the same as that of Massachusetts. If, in this State, a city keeps the streets within its limits in a reasonably safe and convenient condition for public use, it has discharged its whole duty upon the subject; if a city in Massachusetts does less than this, it fails to discharge the duty imposed upon it by the statute of the State. If coasting upon a public street in a city in Indiana is to be regarded as an obstruction which the city is bound to prevent or suppress, it should be so regarded in Massachusetts.
“A municipal corporation is not an insurer against accidents upon the streets and sidewalks. Nor is every defect -therein, though it may cause the injury sued for, actionable. It is sufficient, we think, if the streets (which include sidewalks and bridges thereon) are in a reasonably safe condition for travel in the ordinary modes, by night as well as by day.” 'This is the liability which, under its statutes, is held to exist in Massachusetts.
In the case of Barber v. City of Roxbury, 11 Allen, 318, the court says:
“ But we are not aware of any precedent for holding an illegal- use of the highway by men, animals, vehicles, engines ■or any other object, while movable and actually being moved, by human will and direction, and neither fixed to, nor resting on, nor remaining in one position within the travelled part of the highway, to be a defect or want of repair for which the city or town is liable.”
'It is obvious that in the case before us the injury did not' result from any defect in the highway. It was produced by the act of those improperly and unlawfully using the highway, which was at the time, and but for the unlawful acts of those improperly using the street, in a reasonably safe and convenient condition for. public travel. The complaint is not that the appellant’s son was injured because of defects in the street rendering it. unsafe and unfit for public use, but because persons, while engaged in improperly using the street, ran their ■coasting sled against his son, thereby injuring him. If the .appellee is’liable for the injury thus produced, it would follow, logically, that it woidd be liable for an injury caused by loafers lounging upon its streets, occurring in the presence of its officers, if it were known that such persons were accustomed to lounge and loaf upon its streets. To hold incorporated cities liable for such injuries would be unjust and, we think, without .the sanction of law.
In the case of Norristown v. Moyer, 67 Pa. St. 355, relied upon by the appellant, it was incidentally and by way of illustration stated by the judge who tried the case, that persons lounging and loafing upon the street corners constituted a nuisance, but it was not held nor was it intimated that' the city would be liable for the misdeeds of such loafers.
In the case of Parker v. Mayor, etc., 39 Ga. 725, and the cases in this State referred to by the appellant, the objects rendering the use of the highway unsafe and dangerous were of a material nature, fixed, and not at the time being moved and controlled by human will and direction. They were such objects as would constitute a nuisance in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Massachusetts, as well as in Georgia or Indiana.
We think there was no error in sustaining the demurrer" to' the complaint.
Per Curiam. — It is ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that the judgment below be affirmed, at the costs of the appellant.
Coombs, J., dissents; Niblack, J., doubts.