151 Iowa 251 | Iowa | 1911
The accident happened on March 25, 1908, and on April 4, 1908, plaintiff caused a written notice to be given to the city from which we extract the following:
The undersigned, Milford Frazee, states that on the 25th day of March, 1908, while driving a horse and buggy and passing along the street and highway commonly known as the Center Point road, the same being the street and highway extending northerly from the intersection of Thirteenth street and E avenue to the city limits, and at a point upon said road between Thirteenth and Thirty-First streets, and between two and ten rods from the city limits, or Maple avenue, the said horse became frightened and unmanageable at a large stone or boulder in and upon said street and highway, and threw the undersigned from the*255 buggy, fracturing some of his ribs and causing him personal and internal injuries.
That the particular negligence of the city of Cedar Rapids which caused the injury and damage to the undersigned was in allowing a stone of about 'five and one-half (5Yz) feet and of more than ten feet in diameter to remain in said highway and street, and in such close proximity to the traveled way, as to frighten horses and teams driven along and upon said highway; also in permitting advertising signs to bé painted upon the same and in permitting a permanent obstruction in said street and highway.
The particular injury to the undersigned was the fracturing of one or more ribs, injury to his back, spine, and internal and permanent injuries. That by reason of the injury complained of the undersigned has been damaged in the sum of three thousand five hundred ($3,500.-00), which amount he hereby makes claim for and against the city of Cedar Rapids, and asks that the same be paid to him.
On June 3, 1908, plaintiff caused an original notice to be served upon the city which contained the following, among other, statements: “You are hereby notified that on or before the 23d day of June, A. D. 1908, there will be on filé in the office of the clerk of the district court of the state of Iowa, in and for Linn county, the petition of the plaintiff aforesaid, claiming of you, the city of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars, . . . as money justly due from you the city of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on account of damages received by him on or about the 25th day of March, 1908, by reason of defects and obstructions in a certain street known as the Center Point road, or Thirteenth Street East. For full statement of cause of action, see petition on filé.”
No reference was made to any ditch or excavation in the original petition, and no claim was. made for damages to property. In an amended and substituted petition, filed as before stated, plaintiff made claim for damages done his
If nothing more than the general statute of limitations were involved, there would be much force in appellant’s contention, if we are to follow Gordon v. Railroad, 129 Iowa, 747, and Thayer v. Coal Co., 129 Iowa, 550. But the propositions involve the construction of a special statute reading as follows: “In all cases of personal injury or damage to property resulting from defective streets or sidewalks, or from any cause originating in the neglect or failure of any municipal corporation or of its officers to perform their duties, no suit shall be brought against any such city after three month's from the time of the injury or damage, and not then unless a written verified statement of the amount, nature and cause of such injury or damage, and the time when and the place where such injury occurred, and the particular defect or negligence of the city or its officers which it is claimed caused or contributed to the injury or damage, shall he presented to the council or filed with the clerk within thirty days after said alleged injury or damage was sustained.” Code, section 1051. Under this section it has been held that there can be no recovery, under an amendment to a petition filed more than three months after the injury, for items of damage not included in the statement of the claim. Ulbrecht v. Keokuk, 124 Iowa, 1.
But in Schnee v. Dubuque, 122 Iowa, 459, we said of this statute:
It seems to us that the notice sufficiently states facts which, if established, might render the city liable. It is not necessary for us to determine how far other facts and*257 circumstances tending to show how the accident happened, and the defective condition of the walk, may be proven under such a notice. If the defective condition of the walk which was described contributed, with other causes, to the resulting injury, the city may be liable, although the other causes were not the result of the fault of the city, provided, of course, they were not due to negligence of the person injured. Eginoire v. Union County, 112 Iowa, 558; Gould v. Schermer, 101 Iowa, 582; Hodges v. Waterloo, 109 Iowa, 444; Langhammer v. Manchester, 99 Iowa, 295. It must be borne in mind in the construction of this statute that it requires- a very prompt notice of the injury and of the defect complained of. It may well be that some material facts are not. discoverable until the witnesses are examined in court. On the trial of the case great liberality is allowed in amendment to make the pleadings cover the particular facts disclosed by the evidence. No amendment of the notice, however, is provided for. It is evident, therefore, that it would be unjust to give to the statute so strict a construction as to exclude proof of all facts relating to the nature and cause of the injury, and the defect or negligence complained of, which are not detailed in the notice. The statute should rather give a liberal construction, to the end that parties having meritorious claims shall not be cut off by mere technicality as to the form of notice required. City of Lincoln v. Pirner, 59 Neb. 634 (81 N. W. 846); Tattan v. Detroit, 128 Mich. 650 (87 N. W. 894).
The section quoted applies to 'special charter cities only, and it is contended that while defendant was such a city when the accident occurred, it had, prior to that time, by vote properly taken, adopted the commission plan of government, although i.t had not selected its officers under this plan, and did not do so until about two weeks after the accident occurred. The so-called commission plan of government is provided by chapter 48, Acts Thirty-Second General Assembly, and chapter 64, Acts Thirty-Third General Assembly. The latter act did not become effective, however, until April 1, 1909, and is not material to any issue in this case.
Without now going into the vexed question as to whether or not we should take judicial notice of the procedure of the defendant city relative to the change of its form of government and of the exact time when these changes occurred, we shall take it for granted that appellant’s statements with reference thereto are true. But the section last quoted expressly provides that no right or liability,- either in favor of or against it, existing at the time, and no suit or prosecution of any kind, shall be affected by such change. This, as it seems to us, is controlling, and it undoubtedly relegates us to the law as it existed when the injury occurred. Under that law plaintiff had no right to introduce claims for damages to property in his amended and substituted petition; but if we are to follow the holding in Thayer v. Coal Co. and Schnee v. Dubuque, supra, it seems that the trial court was in error in striking the second count of the amended and substituted petition. See, as further supporting this view, McCartney v. City, 124 Iowa, 382.
Speaking more directly to the proposition here involved, we quoted from a Massachusetts case the following: “In the present case the only collateral inquiry which could arise is whether a horse, called by a witness 'an ordinarily safe and gentle horse,’ comes within that class.Such inquiry is certainly simple. We think there would be no practical difficulty in receiving and weighing testimony in regard to the conduct of horses' which seem to be like ordinary horses in common use.” Bemis v. Temple, 162 Mass. 342 (38 N. E. 970, 26 L. R. A. 254). And from House v. Metcalf, 27 Conn. 631, we quoted the following: “The plaintiff had a right, not only to show the facts regarding its size, form, location, exposure to view, and mode of operation, from which the jury might infer what effects it would naturally, necessarily, or probably produce, but also to prove what effects it had produced in fact. . . . The inquiry in every such ease is not, whether the evidence offered is sufficient to prove the fact claimed, but whether it tends to prove it.” Manifestly the trial court was in error in striking out this testimony.
In Morse v. Town of Richmond, 41 Vt. 438 (98 Am. Dec. 600), the court said: “That, perhaps, may be as effectually defeated by an obstruction which impedes travel by its frightful appearance, as by one which, if it is hit, will be an obstacle to the secure passage of the wheels of a carriage.” Again, in Bartlett v. Hooksett, 48 N. H. 18, it is said: “Objects calculated to frighten horses would often be far more dangerous and much less easily guarded against by the traveler than any obstruction with which he comes in actual contact or collision.” In Foshay v. Town, 25 Wis. 288 (3 Am. Rep. 73), it was said: “We adopt upon this subject the rule . . . that objects within the limits of a highway naturally calculated to frighten horses of ordinary gentleness may constitute such deficiencies in the way as to render the town liable, even though so far removed from the traveled path as to avoid all danger of collision.” Other cases to the same effect might be cited, but this seems unnecessary in view of the general tenor of the authorities. They will be found collected in Beach on Public Corporations, vol. 2, section 1513, and in volume 5, Thompson on Negligence, section 6075 et seq.
This is the rule announced in our own case of Cutter v. Des Moines, 137 Iowa, 644. The only qualification is that the traveler, in order to have protection, must be driving a horse of ordinary gentleness and docility, and himself be in the exercise of due care. See Town of Rushville v. Adams, 107 Ind. 475 (8 N. E. 292, 57 Am. Rep.
The person using a highway for purposes other than travel is in duty bound to conform to the rights of the traveling public. A violation of these duties may constitute negligence and lead to legal liability. There is no rule of law that forbids a person from traveling on the highway with a skittish or ill-broken horse; but, if he do so, he may be liable for the injuries resulting therefrom. Nor is there any fixed rule as to what objects a person may bring upon, or what acts he may do upon, a highway. But there are objects and acts which have a tendency to frighten horses. ... If a person bring such an object upon or do such an action on a highway, he will violate a duty he owes to the traveling public, and be guilty of negligence. It does not follow that because he is negligent he • is liable. The person injured may also be in fault. If the latter be traveling with a' skittish or untrustworthy horse, there are instances in which he will be deemed to have assumed the risk or contributed to his own injury; for, although the object or act done may have had a tendency or was likely to frighten any kind. of a horse, and although both a gentle horse and a skittish horse might have passed the object or act without becoming frightened, still there is mueh more probability that a*262 skittish horse would become frightened than a gentle and well-trained one.' It is for these reasons that in order to make the complaint good it -should aver, either specially or in equivalent general terms, that the object or act done had a tendency to or was likely to frighten a horse of ordinary gentleness. In other words, the complaint must aver negligence on the part of the defendant, and negative contributory’ negligence on the part of the plaintiff. ... If the obstruction or act be one that a person have no right to do or make at all, then there may be a liability, even though the horse be not one of ordinary gentleness.
Appellant’s contention that plaintiff need not show that the horse he was driving was one of ordinary gentleness has no support in any of the cases cited. The nearest approach to such a rule is found in Peterson v. Exp. Co., 111 Iowa, 572. But the question there considered was one of contributory negligence, and the matter here involved was neither discussed nor decided.
Again, the instruction is erroneous, in that it im
The record is in some confusion, but the points we have considered do not seem to be in dispute.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.