127 Neb. 852 | Neb. | 1934
This is an action to recover from Butler county $10,000 in damages for alleged negligence in removing the covering from a culvert approximately eight feet wide and three feet deep across the Loma highway and in leaving the roadway and the channel of the culvert open at night without barricades, lights or other sufficient warning of danger. Plaintiff was injured about 9 o’clock p. m. July
The cause was tried to a jury and at the close of plain tiff’s evidence the trial court directed a verdict in favor ol Butler county. From a dismissal of the action plaintiff appealed. Upon a review of the record the judgment was affirmed, the former rulings on appeal being as follows:
“At common law counties are not liable for damages for injuries arising out of defects in roads or bridges.
“Counties under township organization are not liable for damages for injuries arising out of defects in a road or bridge, unless (1) the particular road has been designated as a county road or (2) the bridge passes over a stream.” Franek v. Butler County, 126 Neb. 797. A further hearing was granted on motion of plaintiff and the questions presented by the record were reargued and reconsidered.
The Loma highway is on a section line. It had been open to and used by the public generally for more than ten years. It is, therefore, a public highway authorized by statute. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 39-103. It is in Butler county, which let a contract under which the Loma highway was graded and otherwise repaired. The accident occurred in the course of the improvement. On the issue of the county’s negligence in leaving the roadway and the culvert open at night without barricades or lights or other sufficient notice or warning of danger, plaintiff made a prima facie case for the recovery of damages. The question for reconsideration upon the reargument, therefore, is
A county is a political subdivision of the state, having subordinate powers of sovereignty conferred by the legislature for the purposes of local administration, and consequently is not liable at common law for negligence in improving a public highway. The former opinion herein properly so held. Franek v. Butler County, 126 Neb. 797. To change the common law in this respect the legislature in 1889 enacted a law containing in part the following provision:
“If special damage happens to any person, his team, carriage, or other property, by means of insufficiency or. want of repairs of a highway or bridge which the county or counties are liable to keep in repair, the person sustaining the damage may recover in a case against the county.” Laws 1889, ch. 7, sec. 4, Comp. St. 1929, sec. 39-832.
This is now the law. When enacted it applied alike to all counties. No distinction in the statute itself was made between counties. Sovereign immunity from liability for negligence in improving public highways was taken away without recognition of different forms of county government.
According to the prima facie case made by plaintiff, Butler county entered into a contract for the improvement of the Loma highway and by negligence in leaving the roadway and culvert open at night without sufficient warning caused the injuries for which plaintiff seeks damages. As already shown, sovereign immunity from such liability was removed in 1889. What is now the defense? It is that the Loma highway was never designated a “county road” and therefore is not one which Butler county is “liable to keep in repair,” within the meaning of the statute abrogating common-law immunity from negligence. Butler county had statutory power to improve the Loma highway by designating it a “county road,” by contracting for the improvement, and by making necessary
Reversed.