57 Wash. 329 | Wash. | 1910
This suit was brought to recover for personal injuries. From a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant has appealed.
“That immediately after said injury, plaintiff caused the city of Tacoma and its officers and agents to be fully informed of the time, place, cause, nature, and extent of his said injury, and the said city of Tacoma and its officers and agents immediately investigated said injury and the cause thereof and the extent of the same.”
The appellant demurred to the complaint on the ground, among others, that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer being overruled, issue was joined, and the case tried to a jury with the result stated.
The case is brought here on the record, and the single question presented is, whether the complaint states a cause of action. Section 215 of the revised city charter of the city of Tacoma provides:
“All claims for injuries to the person, alleged to have been caused or sustained by reason of defects, want of repair or obstruction of any of the highways, streets, alleys, sidewalks, or crosswalks of the city, shall be presented in writing to the city council within thirty days after such injuries shall be alleged to have been received. Such writing shall state the time, place, cause, nature, and extent of the alleged injuries so far as practicable, and shall be verified by affidavit of the claimant to the effect that the same is true. The omission to present any such claim in the manner or within the time
The appellant first urges that the complaint is subject to a demurrer because it does not state that the claim was presented to the city council. The respondent contends that, whilst the complaint may have been defective as against a motion to make it more definite and certain, as to a demurrer every reasonable intendment and presumption should be indulged to support it, and that when this is done it sufficiently appears that notice was given to the city council. We grant the rule of liberal interpretation, but with this indulgence we do not think the complaint states that notice was given to the city council. It was a simple matter to plead the notice, if it had in fact been given. The complaint has the appearance of a studied effort to avoid, rather than to state, the giving of the notice to the council.
The respondent next contends that the injury did not result from any defect, want of repair, or obstruction in the street as a place of travel; that the fact that the injury happened in the street is a mere incident, and that the charter provision is inapplicable. We think this view must prevail. The giving of a notice to the city or its governing body upon claims for injuries by tort is not necessary as a condition precedent to an action thereon against the municipality, unless expressly required by statute or charter. 28 Cyc. 1447. A charter or statute requiring a notice or presentment of a claim, as a condition precedent to the commencement of an action, requires a strict construction, and cannot be extended by implication beyond its terms. 28 Cyc. 1450.
In Pye v. Mankato, 38 Minn. 536, 38 N. W. 621, the complaint charged the city with liability on account of the raising of the grade of certain streets so as to form embankments obstructing a water course which crossed the same, by reason of which, and because the gutters provided for carrying off the water were insufficient for that purpose, water was collected and discharged upon the plaintiff’s premises.
In Moran v. St. Paul, 54 Minn. 279, 56 N. W. 80, the complaint alleged that the property adj oining the street had been injured by water escaping from a defective water pipe in one of the public streets. There was no averment in the complaint that a written notice of the plaintiff’s claim for damages had been served upon the mayor or city clerk, as required by the defendant’s charter, and it was urged upon demurrer to the complaint that a cause of action was not stated. The court held that the words in the charter, “any defect in the condition of any . .. street.” referred to “their usefulness and safety for the purpose of travel.”
In McIntee v. Middletown, 80 App. Div. 434, 81 N. Y. Supp. 124, the plaintiff was injured by the caving of the dirt while digging a trench for a sewer in a street in the city. The court, in holding that the charter provision requiring notice to be served on the common council did not apply, said: “and the mere fact that this sewer happened to be in the highway does not bring it within the letter or the spirit of the provision of the charter.”
The judgment will be affirmed.
Fullerton, Chadwick, Dunbar, Mount, Crow, and Parker, JJ., concur.