166 N.W. 631 | S.D. | 1918
Action for personal injury alleged to have been rteceiviad by plaintiff by -reason of having fallen into a hole in a side-walk in defendant City. There wa-s verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeal's.
“No action for the recovery of -damages for -p-ersdnia-l -injury or death againSIfc any city or incorporated town, on account of its negligence, -shall be maintained unless written' notice of -the time, place and cau'se of injury is given to the clerk olf the cli’ty or incoirpor-aibe'd town, by the person injured, his or her a-ge-nt, or attorney, within sixty .day-s after the injury, a-nd any action for such recovery must be commenced within two years from the occurrence of -the tacci-dlemt causing the injury or death, but the notice given under the .provisions of this act shall not ¡be -deemed .invalid or insufficient by reason of any inaccuracy in stating the time, place or cause of injury. Provided, it -is shown that -there was no intention to mislead .and that the city ociuneil or board of trustees was not misled thereby.”
While there is no evidence in ’the record tending in any manner to show any compliance with the provisions of this
“No action to recover damages for an injury to the person shall be maintained unless, within one year after the happening*162 of the event causing such 'damages, notice in writing, signed 'by the party damaged, ¡his agent oir attorney, shall be served upon the person or corporation by whom it is- claimed 'such1 damage was caused, stating the time and place where such damage occurred!, a brief description of the injuries, <t!h:e manner in which they were received' and the grounds upon which claim is made and that satisfaction thereof i's claimed! of such person or corporation. * * * No such notice -shall b'e deemed insufficient or invalid solely because of any inaccuracy Or failure therein in stating the description of the injuries, tine manner in which they were received or the grounds on which tire ellalim is made, provided it shall 'appear that there wias no intention on the part of the person giving the notice to mislead the other party, and that such party was not in faot misled 'thereby.. * * *”
Tlie substantial principle of the Wisconsin statute is the same as chapter go, Daws of 1907, of this state. This Wisconsin statute applies generally to all personal injury actions against all mtamar of pensions, while the statute of this state applies only to personal injury actions against cities and towns. The provision of the Wisconsin statute relative tci the preliminary notice, like the provision in question in our statute, is found in company with and as a part of a general statute of limitation. The Wlisconsiini counts have constructed the provision Wf section 4222, relating to the preliminary notice before suit, to be a limitation statute, subject to the general rules relative to. limitation statutes. In Malloy v. C. & N. W. Ry. Co., 109 Wis. 29, 85 N. W. 130, in construing this provision' of said section 4222, it Was said:
“Section 4222 limits the time for the commencement of an action to 'recover damage® for an injury to the person to. six years. It also contains, a‘provision as follows [then follows the provision above quoted.] This statute was under consideration in the recent oase of Meisenheimer v. Kellogg [106 Wis. 30] 81 N. W. 1033. Among the grounds urged against the sufficiency of the complaint was that the notice of injury ©et forth therein was molt sufficient, and that such notice was a 'condition precedent to the cause of action. This contention was. distinctly overruled on the ground that the cause of action was one that existed! alt common law, existing independent of the statute, and*163 that the requirement of notice simply set a new limit within which a certain step necessary to enforce the right of action must he exercised. In 'Other words, the statute was' one of limitation, and not a condition .precedent to the right to sue. Gatzow v. Buening, 106 Was. 1003 [81 N. W. 1003, 49 L. R. A. 475, 80 Am. St. Rep. 1]. It necessarily follows therefrom th'alt an allegation of notice to. the party who caused the injury was not essential to the cause of action stated. Neither allegation nor proof of service of such notice being necessary to the plaintiff's right to maintain: his action, a statement in the 00m-pkint of the giving of such notice, and a denial in the answer, presented no issue fatal to the plaintiff's recovery. The cause of action was complete without such allegation, and a mere denial of it did not put the defendant in position to rely upon the limitation as a bar to the action. It has long been the rule ■of pleading that a party relying on the statute of limitations must plead it, or he cannot avail himself of that defense. Either the statute must be referred to, or the facts showing the limitation has run must be set out in tibe pleading, or it is waived.”
Other Wisconsin decisions sustain the same view. Relyea v. Tomahawk Co., 102 Wis. 301, 78 N. W. 412, 72 Am. St. Rep. 878; Meisenheimer v. Kellogg, 106 Wis. 30, 81 N. W. 1033; O’Connor v. Fond du Lac, 109 Wis. 253, 85 N. W. 327, 53 L. R. A. 831; Bunker v. Hudson, 122 Wis. 43, 99 N. W. 448;; Arp. v. Allis-Chalmers Co., 130 Wis. 454, 110 N. W. 386, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 997, and note, 118 Am. St. Rep. 1036. In this state we have no statute in relation *0 personal injuries similar in nature to section 1339, Wis. 1898 Stat. The plaintiff’s cause of action for personal injury, within the meaning of chapter pa, Laws olf 1907, is based' on common-law negligence for failure to observe some legal duty resting upon the defendant city or town, and -not upon statutory negligence such as is comprehended within the meaning of section 1339 of the Wisconsin statute. Section 39, C. C. Pr., of this state, provides, th-e question iclf the statute of limitations can only be raised by answer. We therefore hold that appellant, not having raised tibe bar of the statute for the failure to give the preliminary notice provided for by said chapter 90, Laws 1907, by answer,
Binding1 no arwr in the record1, the judgment and orcter appealed from are affirmed.