184 S.W.2d 890 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1945
Affirming.
Appellant, by his next friend, instituted the action against appellee to recover for injuries sustained as a result of the negligence of appellee, in failing to properly maintain its streets and public ways for use by the public. The suit was instituted more than 90 days after the happening of the accident, and without complying with the provisions of KRS
A special demurrer to the jurisdiction of the Court was filed, because the notice required by KRS
In Treitz v. City of Louisville,
The act does not purport to prescribe a period of limitation within which suit must be brought; it requires, as a condition precedent to the filing of the suit, that the particular notice must be conveyed to designated public officers, as, in the language of Mr. Justice Cardozo, "a prerequisite to the right to sue." Since the giving of the notice is a prerequisite to the right to sue, the petition must allege that the notice has been given in the manner prescribed by statute. The injured person may then file his suit at any time within the period of limitation prescribed for the commencement of actions in tort. In City of Irvine et al. v. Cox,
The contention that the act is not applicable to suits by infants of tender years presents a question upon which the courts are not in agreement. The majority rule is that, in the absence of an exception in the statute requiring notice to be given, the courts are without power to disregard the mandate of the statute, or to suspend the time in which it may be given. The minority rule is to the effect that an infant is not charged with knowledge of the provisions of the act, at least until he arrives at the age of discretion, or until a guardian shall have been appointed for him. Some of the cases adhering to the majority rule are: Miramar Co. v. City of Santa Barbara, Cal.App.,
In Baker v. Town of Manitou, Colo., supra, the Court, quoting from Peoples v. City of Valparaiso,
While our sentimentalities, if followed, would lead us to follow the minority rule, deference to the prerogative of the Legislature forces us to place a strict construction on the statute, and align ourselves, though reluctantly, with those courts that have adopted the majority rule. There is no language contained in the act itself which admits of the construction that the provisions of the act do not apply to all persons, irrespective of age or infirmity. To provide an exception would be, by innuendo, to amend the Statutes. We conceive that we do not have the authority to do this. The need for such an amendment must be addressed to the Legislature.
Nor do we concur with appellant's contention that the requirement of the act may be suspended during the infancy of the claimant. It is true that infancy will give rise to suspension of the limitation of time in which the action may be brought; but this right is one of statutory origin, KRS
Finally, it is suggested by counsel for appellant that this is not a suit for which notice must be given, because the word "defect" as used in the act should be construed to be limited in meaning to a blemish in the surface of the street. This construction is too narrow to effectuate the purpose for which the act was passed. Appellant was injured by being struck by the bed of a truck owned and operated by the city, when it was dislodged from the frame on which it rested by reason of *92 colliding with a branch of a tree overhanging a public thoroughfare of the city; and the negligence relied on was the failure of the city to keep the thoroughfare free of the obstruction. One of the purposes of the notice is to permit the city to investigate the cause of the accident, and to determine the condition of the defect complained of at the time of the accident. Since a branch of a tree, by growth, may be extended or, by destruction, may be eliminated, it is as important to the rights of the municipality to determine the condition of this character of defect as it is to determine the condition of any other defect in a street, alley, or thoroughfare. A defect is defined to be an imperfection, flaw, blemish, or fault. The obstruction of the thoroughfare by an overhanging branch is as much a defect in the thoroughfare as if it were a blemish in the surface of the street. It is obvious the Legislature intended the word "defect," as used in the act, to be construed to be any defect, whether overhead or underfoot, which it is the duty of the city to correct to render the street or thoroughfare in a reasonably safe condition for travel by the public.
For the reasons stated, the judgment must be, and hereby is, affirmed.
Whole Court sitting.