175 Ind. 500 | Ind. | 1911
This is an action by appellant against appellee for damages on account of an injury received, caused by an alleged defective sidewalk in the city of Franklin.
Error is assigned upon the ruling of the court sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. The complaint alleges that appellant was injured by falling upon a dangerous sidewalk and breaking his leg on July 31, 1907, producing a compound fracture; that, at the time of the injury, a member of the common council of appellee city knew of the condition of the sidewalk where appellant was injured, and knew of the accident within ten days after it occurred, the nature of the injury, and the place where it occurred; that on October 23, 1907, eighty-four days after the injury, appellant served the mayor of the city with a “written notice of the time, place, cause and nature of the injury to plaintiff alleged to have occurred herein, and the conditions herein set forth as existing at the date of the accident did exist at the date of said written notice and for a period of five months thereafter;” that about December, 1907, and continuously thereafter up to the time of filing the complaint, on June 6, 1908, the broken and splintered bones created a pressure upon the nerves of the leg, with inflammation and great pain of body and mind, by which he was deprived of the use of his leg, and a permanent injury was produced.
Appellant contends that under article 4, §19, of the state Constitution, the act is void as to “streets and alleys,” because the title thereof refers only to “highways and bridges.” Upon this proposition it is to be observed that the term “highways” is a generic term, and includes streets, alleys and other public ways, and as disclosed by the title and the body of the act, as referring to “highways” in cities and towns, the term is broad enough to include streets and alleys, for they are distinctive highways of cities and towns, as distinguished from rural highways. Strange v. Board, etc. (1910), 173 Ind. 640, and cases cited; City of Indianapolis v. Higgins (1895), 141 Ind. 1, and cases cited; Board, etc., v. Castetter (1893), 7 Ind. App. 309, 314; Southern Kan. R. Co. v. Oklahoma City (1902), 12 Okla. 82, 69 Pac. 1050; Abbott v. City of Duluth (1900), 104 Fed. 833, 837; State v. Cowan (1847), 29 N. C. 239, 248; Harding v. Inhabitants of Medway (1845), 51 Mass. 465; Jenkins v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (1887), 27 Mo. App. 578, 583; Parsons v. City and County of San Francisco (1863), 23 Cal. 462, 463; Elliott, Roads and Sts. (2d ed.) §§1, 19, 453.
The act in nowise conflicts with the constitutional provision as to regulating the practice in courts of justice. The act has nothing to do with the practice, but simply creates a condition precedent to the right to maintain the action; that is, the legislature having imposed liability upon certain municipal corporations, limits the right to enforce a liability upon condition of giving the required notice, and the general practice as such obtains in every particular.
The court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint, and the judgment is affirmed.