59 Wis. 623 | Wis. | 1884
This action is brought to recover damages for personal injury occasioned by the insufficiency or want of. repair of a certain highway in the defendant town.
1. The evidence, which tended to show that the highway at the place of the injury was so narrow and so hedged in by an embankment on one side and a fence on the other that two teams could not safely pass each other, and that such was its condition for a long distance, and that the plaintiff, in attempting to pass another team at such place, in the most prudent manner, suffered the injury complained of, and that the team approaching him and his team at that place could not be seen until very near such place, sufficiently shows that the plaintiff was not guilty of any contributory negligence, and that the town was guilty of great
2. The only objection seriously urged against the plaintiff’s recovery is one which goes to his right of action, based upon his failure to give the notice required by sec. 1339, R. S., which requires a notice in writing to be given to the clerk or supervisors of the town within ninety days after the happening of the injury, “ stating the place where such damage occurred, and describing generally the insufficiency or want of repair which occasioned it.” There is no question made but that a notice attempting to comply with this requirement was given to the proper persons and at the proper time, and the only objection to that notice is that it does not state correctly “ the place where such damage occurred.” The description generally of the insufficiency or want of repair of the highway which occasioned the injury was certainly very full and accurate, according to the testimony on behalf of the plaintiff. “The place where” is stated in the notice as “ in section 18 in said town, and between the residence of H. M. Bean and O. D. Wilson, and on the road leading from De Soto to Diamond mill.” Diamond mill is at the east and De Soto at the west, on this highway, running nearly east and west after it leaves the place where, the plaintiff was injured.- The residence of Bean is forty-
From the description of the place where the injury occurred, and the situation of the residence of Bean, it is difficult to tell whether his residence is west or east of such place, on a direct east and west line, for the residence is forty rods south of the road, or southwest, as one witness' states it, which, on such direct line, would bring the place either west of or nearly opposite the residence. It may be that the place of the injury was, in such sense, between the residences of Bean and 'Wilson. At most, the distance from the nearest place strictly between these residences, and the place of the injury is very slight. The notice gives a very full description of the place, in its physical features, as it was proved to. be on the trial, and as above stated,, so that no one with that notice in.his hand, looking for the .place between .those residences, and passing along said
Mr. Morgan, the chairman, and the other members of the board of- supervisors, after receiving this notice, went to view the place, and passed around this bend near Bean’s gate, and then' viewed most critically the highway between the gate and Wilson’s house, where, for the whole distance, the traveled track was very wide and teams could easily pass each other. This part of the highway was nearly level and straight. Mr. Morgan, as a witness, testified that they observed the road around the bend, but not critically-, and that he had long known its condition. That place answered strictly the description in the notice, and was only a few steps from Bean’s gate eastwardly. The common sense of any man would suggest that it is utterly impossible for the plaintiff, in many cases, to describe in a notice the exact spot where his injury was received; and the person injured, and perhaps unconscious, would not be likely to know such precise place. The plaintiff is not required to make a map of its topography, with sensible objects noted upon it, at and near the place, and with courses and distances from and to places and monuments, so that a surveyor could find it with his chain and compass. The only possible object of the notice is to notify the authorities of the town of the place with reasonable certainty and so that they can readily find it with reasonable diligence. Can they pass over and casually observe the place which is as minutely described as
The notices in State ex rel. Supervisors v. Nelson, 57 Wis., 147, were much more substantially a departure from the strict requirement of the statute, and more contradictory than the one in this case, and Mr. Justice LyoN lays down the test rule in respect to such notices that there shall be no difficulty in ascertaining the place meant, and says: “We think this a substantial and reasonable compliance with the statute.”
Tested by the rule well established in all cases of description,— that if there is a repugnance between a certain number or place named and other general description by which the real place can be ascertained with reasonable certainty, the number or place will be rejected as surplusage or explained by such general description as a mistake, — this notice was amply sufficient. Thompson v. Jones, 4 Wis., 106. If the place of the injury in this case was not strictly between the residences of Bean and Wilson, it was so very near to such place by other sufficient description as to make the difference intensely technical; and it being so near, and not only obvious to but observed by them, we will not stultify the supervisors by even supposing that they did not know the real place meant by the notice.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.