73 N.W. 427 | N.D. | 1897
This action was brought to recover damages for a personal injury. There was a verdict for plaintiff, a new trial was denied, and defendant appeals. There is but little conflict in the testimony. The plaintiff was a farmer living a few miles from the town of Northwood, in Grand Forks County, and was in the habit of marketing his produce and doing his trading in such town. The defendant was the owner of a store building on the principal business street in said town. This street had been improved in such a manner that it was highest in the center, and sloped gradually from the center to the sidewalk, so that at the
Whether or not the stones in the street, in the condition in which they were, or in which, under the evidence, the jury was warranted in saying they were, constituted a defect of which the plaintiff could legally complain, was a question for the jury. In other words, it was for the jury to say whether or not the defendant had, by placing the stones in the street, rendered it unsafe. Gerald v. City of Boston, 108 Mass. 580; Dowd v. Chicopee, 116 Mass. 93; Lane v. Town of Hancock, 142 N. Y. 510, 37 N. E. Rep. 473; Shear. & R. Neg. § 350, and cases cited. Cases can be found where courts have held, as a matter of law, that no recovery could be had for injuries resulting from certain defects or obstructions in the street. Raymond v. City of Lowell, 6 Cush. 524, Beltz v. City of Yonkers, 148 N. Y. 67, 42 N. E. Rep. 401; Grant v. Town of Enfield, (Sup.) 42 N. Y. Supp. 107. But these courts all admit that where, on the question of whether or not a given obstruction or defect renders the street unsafe, different minds might honestly reach different conclusions, such question must go to the jury, although there be no dispute whatever as to the character of the defect or obstruction. Upon this latter theory, even, it is clear that the question of the nature of the defect was for the jury in this case. Nor must this case be confounded with cases of accidental and temporary defects, which might arise by a brick working loose in a walk, or from an accidental block in the street, — things which ordinary prudence might not successfully guard against. In this case the obstruction, if such it was, was placed there purposely and in a manner to make it permanent in its character.
Nor do we find any error in the instructions of the court on this branch of the case. Numerous exceptions to the charge were taken, but most of them are too general for us to notice,
It is strenuously urged, however, that plaintiff cannot recover, by reason of his contributory negligence. It is claimed that his act in stepping from the sidewalk to the street in the dark, and without stopping to examine the condition of the street into which he was stepping, and without halting or taking any precautions for his safety, was, per se, such an act of negligence as bars his recovery. We can perceive no sufficient reason for entering, at this time and in this case, upon any lengthy discussion of the law relating to contributory negligence. The matter has certainly been exhausted, and by writers who were mastei's of the subject. We need only apply the law as it has been decided. “Contributory negligence, in its legal signification, is such an act or omission on the part of a plaintiff, amounting to a want of ordinaiy care, as, concunfing or co-operating with the negligent act of the defendant, is a pi'oximate cause or occasion of the injuxy complained of.” Beach, Contrib. Neg. § 7. As a general rule, it is conclusively settled that the presence of such negligence on the part of a plaintiff will defeat any recovery. “The failui'e to exercise such care, prudence, and forethought as duty requires to be given or exercised under the circumstances is negligence.” Brotherton v. Improvement Co., 48 Neb. 563, 67 N. W. Rep. 479. “By ordinary care is meant such care as a prudent man would use under the same cixxumstances. It must be measured by the character and risks of the business.” Railway Co. v. Barrett, 166 U. S. 617, 17 Sup. Ct. 707. “The standard of
The defendant assigns as error the refusal of the court to give the following instruction requested by the defendant: “If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff, without cause walked across the sidewalk, and stepped off from it into the gutter, without looking where he was stepping, the court charges you that he was guilty of negligence in so doing.” There was no evidence whatever that the plaintiff left the sidewalk “without cause.” All the evidence showed that he had a well defined purpose in so doing, and that was to unfasten his team and get into his vehicle. It would be most unreasonable to say that he should unfasten his team from a ring in the sidewalk while standing thereon. It might be done, but the ordinary man does not voluntarily assume a position so strained and uncomfortable, when, by stepping from the sidewalk, it could be avoided. Neither would it be reasonable for the jury to say that he should have gotten into his vehicle — a common farm wagon — without leaving the sidewalk. Again, it was misleading to talk to the
Appellant argues upon the theory that the fact that the walk was two feet above the street was in itself a dangerous defect; that plaintiff knew of this defect; and that, in attempting to pass it, he voluntarily assumed the risks attendant thereon, and that his injury was simply the result of his error of judgment in thinking that he could safely pass the defect. That reasoning, when applied to the facts in this case, would carry us to this result: Where a party assumes the risk of passing a known danger, and in making such passage encounters another and unknown danger, whereby he is injured, he is without remedy because in presuming to pass the known danger he assumed all risk of being hurt. But, of course, such is not the law. Had the street been in fact as plaintiff had a right to presume it was, — reasonably safe and free from danger, — and had plaintiff nevertheless been injured, he might have been without remedy. But instead of stepping from the sidewalk down upon a dirt street as he supposed he would, plaintiff stepped upon a projecting stone placed and fastened there by the act of the defendant, and that, under the evidence, was the proximate and sole cause of the injury; and, where the cause of an injury is thus specifically ascertained, the law will not stop to speculate upon what might have occurred had such cause been absent.
Was plaintiff negligent in stepping off the walk as he did, and in not seeing the stone that caused the accident? Here again we must use the same standard of measurement, — the actions of men of ordinary prudence under the same circumstances. We think the jury, as practical men, would at once say that the man of average prudence, coming out of that store for the purpose of unhitching his team, would have stepped from the walk down into the street. If so, there was no negligence in stepping down
Affirmed.
Note—One making an excavation adjoining a public way is liable to one who