226 Wis. 92 | Wis. | 1937
The city of Milwaukee is the owner of the Maryland avenue school building and the grounds adjacent thereto. During the summer of 1933, the school grounds were used with the consent of the city by children and adults alike for play and recreational purposes. The activities conducted upon those grounds were a part of a general summer playground movement or system fostered by the city. On August 24, 1933, a final or closing children’s summer festival was held there. The festival was held during the early evening of that day. Approximately a thousand people attended the exercises. The participants, during the course of the exercises, went in and out of the north entrance to the school building for the purpose of putting on and removing their costumes. The plaintiff, in response to a typewritten invitation distributed by the children, went to the school grounds
The principal contention of the defendant is that the safe-place statute does not apply to a situation like the one here, because, at the time the plaintiff was injured the city was promoting an exhibition in connection with the supervised school-grounds play, and while so acting was performing a
This action, however, is not grounded upon the common law or upon any asserted negligence against the city, its officers, agents, or servants. It is grounded solely upon the safe-place statute.
Ch. 101, Stats. 1933, so far as here material, provides :
Sec. 101.06 “. . . Every owner of . . . a public building now or hereafter constructed shall so construct, repair or maintain such . . . public building . . . as to render the same safe.”
Sec. 101.01 (11) “The term ‘safe’ or ‘safety’ as applied to ... a public building, shall mean such freedom from danger to the life, health, safety or welfare of employees or frequenters, or the public, ... as the nature of the employment, place of employment, or public building, will reasonably permit.”
Sec. 101.01 (12) “The term ‘public building’ as used in sections 101.01 to 101.29 shall mean and include any structure used in whole or in part as a place of resort, assemblage,*98 lodging, trade, traffic, occupancy, or use by the public, or by three or more tenants."
Sec. 101.01 (13) “The term ‘owner’ shall mean and include every person, firm, corporation, state, county, town, city, village, school district, sewer district, drainage district and other public or quasi-public corporations as well as any manager, representative, officer, or other person having ownership, control or custody of any place of employment or public building, or of the construction, repair, or maintenance of any place of employment or public building. ...”
Sec. 101.01 (5) “The term ‘frequenter’ shall mean and include every person, other than an employee, who may go in or be in a place of employment or public building under circumstances which render him other than a trespasser.”
The words of the statute are clear, plain, and unambiguous, and when construed according to their common and approved usage as required by law, sec. 370.01 (1), are clearly applicable to a school building, owned by a city, and to a frequenter who may go in or be in such a public building under circumstances which do not render him a trespasser. The history of the development of the safe-place statute as it existed in 1933 shows a conscious and deliberate intention on the part of the several legislatures to broaden its scope and to enlarge the sphere of its applicability. When first adopted in 1911, it concededly applied only to employers and frequenters and to places of employment. Ch. 485, Laws of 1911. In 1913, the law was amended so as to include “a public building” as follows :
“Every owner of ... a public building now or hereafter constructed shall so construct, repair or- maintain such . . . public building ... as to render the same safe.” Ch. 588, Laws of 1913. •
In 1917, the law was further amended by defining the term “frequenter” to include “every person, other than an employee, who may go in or be in a place of employment or public building under circumstances which render him other
“The term ‘owner’ shall mean and include every person, firm, corporation, state, county, town, city, village, school district, sewer district, drainage district, and other public or quasi-public corporations as well as any manager, representative, officer or other person having ownership, control or custody of any place of employment or public building, or of the construction, repair or maintenance of any place of employment or public building. ...” Ch. 161, Laws of 1931.
The purpose and intent of the legislature greatly to broaden the application of the safe-place statute is indeed clear.
But the defendant earnestly contends that since the original safe-place statute and its various amendments are laws passed in derogation of the common law, the statute should be strictly construed, Folk v. Milwaukee, supra; Juul v. School District, supra; Srnka v. Joint District No. 3, supra; Sullivan v. School District, supra; Brown v. Loewenbach, 217 Wis. 379, 258 N. W. 379; that the intention of the legislature to abrogate a well-established rule of common law must clearly appear in order to accomplish such a result; that such intent does not appear because the legislature did not specifically provide by apt language expressive of such intent that the safe-place statute should be applicable to a city when engaged in performing a governmental function. In Sullivan v. School District, supra, it was held in substance that a pupil was not a frequenter and could not recover from the school district in whose school building he was injured. It was there said (p. 506) :
“The doctrine of nonliability of a municipality for the performance of governmental functions is so deeply rooted in our jurisprudence and has so generally been recognized*100 and accepted for so long a period of time that in effect it has virtually attained the force of a statute, and while such doctrine has been recognized for over a half a century no legislature has attempted to nullify it.”
The pupil who sought to recover damages in that action sustained an injury as a result of the failure of the school district to equip certain saws in its manual training department with proper safety devices and safeguards. The conclusion reached by the court at the time it decided that case (1923) was that a pupil attending a school is not a frequenter. The argument of the defendant that the legislature, had it intended the safe-place statute to apply to a city in the performance of a governmental function, would have expressly so provided, is not now persuasive. The several legislatures of Wisconsin, since the year 1911, have written into the safe-place statute, language which is clear and amply comprehensive to bring within the provisions of the safe-place law, cities and school districts, and the public buildings owned by them. Piad the legislature intended that the safe-place statute should not apply to cities and school districts while performing governmental functions or to school buildings, it' would have been a simple matter so to provide.
In Srnka v. Joint District No. 3, supra, decided in 1921; which involved an injury which occurred on November 25, 1919, it was held that the safe-place statute was not applicable to a school district or to a school building owned by it so as to render a school district liable to a pupil for injuries from a defect in the building. This conclusion was reached because the law did not specifically refer to school districts. But since that decision the law has been amended so as to include school districts.
We think it clear, therefore, that the legislature fully intended that the safe-place law should apply to cities and school districts. In Schumacher v. Milwaukee, 209 Wis. 43,
“It is true that statutes in derogation of the common law are to be strictly construed, but that does not mean that the court is to struggle to defeat the purposes of the legislature.”
In Wilson v. Evangelical Lutheran Church, 202 Wis. 111, 230 N. W. 708, it was held that a church building was within the meaning of the words “public buildings,” and that the doctrine of nonliability of a church, because of its religious and charitable nature, had in part been abrogated by the safe-place statute. It was there said (p. 113) :
“If the complaint in this case states a cause of action it is because the defendant failed to maintain a public building so as to render the same safe. The principle upon which charitable corporations were held not to be liable for acts of their servants involved considerations of public policy. It is peculiarly within the province of the legislature to determine questions of public policy. The chapter referred to makes no exceptions of religious or charitable corporations and there appears to us to be no reason why it does not apply to a place of worship maintained by a religious corporation. More appropriate language to express that intention could scarcely be employed.” See also Jaeger v. Evangelical Luth. Holy Ghost Cong. 219 Wis. 209, 262 N. W. 585.
It is our conclusion that the legislature intended that cities and school districts, as owners of public buildings, should be subject to the safe-place statute regardless of whether at a given time they are acting in a proprietary or governmental capacity, and that a city or school district may be liable to a frequenter who is injured in one of their public buildings, when such injury is proximately caused by a lack of safety, as defined by law, i. e., unsafe construction or unsafe maintenance.
The defendant next contends that the evidence is not sufficient to show a violation of the safe-place statute by the city.
“When the experts disagree in a jury case the question can hardly be settled except by the jury.”
Generally speaking, whether the safe-place statute is complied with or violated is a question for the jury. Bunce v. Grand & Sixth Building, Inc., supra; Bent v. Jonet, 213 Wis. 635, 252 N. W. 290; Sweitzer v. Fox, ante, p. 26, 275 N. W. 546.
Moreover, the corridor in which the steps were located was not artificially lighted at the time the plaintiff was injured. Failure to light a building, or part of a building, subject to the safe-place statute, is regarded as a failure to maintain the building in a safe condition and consequently a violation of the safe-place statute regarding maintenance. Wilson v. Evangelical Lutheran Church, supra, p. 114; Kinney v. Luebkeman, 214 Wis. 1, 252 N. W. 282.
The jury in this action found that the corridor was not safe, that the failure to light the corridor was a failure to
The defendant next contends that the evidence adduced impels the conclusion that the negligence of the plaintiff immediately before and at the time she fell and sustained her injury was as great or greater than that of the defendant city. We are of the opinion that under the facts of this case the comparison of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence, with that of the defendant, was for the jury, and that its finding that only ten per cent of the causal negligence was attributable to the plaintiff should not be disturbed. McGuiggan v. Hiller Brothers, 209 Wis. 402, 245 N. W. 97; Brown v. Haertel, 210 Wis. 345, 244 N. W. 630.
The defendant next contends that its motion for a new trial should have been granted, (1) because the court refused to give certain requested instructions to the jury; (2) because it erroneously instructed the jury; and (3) because it erroneously received in evidence several photographs of the basement corridor along which the plaintiff traveled just prior to her accident, which photographs were taken long after the night in question, and which incidentally revealed that the steps upon which the plaintiff fell had been removed and a slanting floor or ramp effect constructed .in their place. We have carefully examined the instructions requested, as well as the instructions given, of which complaint is made, and are of the opinion that no prejudice resulted to the defendant therefrom. As to the photographs, we are also of the opinion that no prejudice resulted to the defendant. The photographs were received in evidence solely for the purpose of showing the general surroundings. Ordinarily, in personal-injury actions repairs or alterations made after an accident has occurred cannot be proyen for the purpose of tending to
Other contentions of the defendant have been carefully considered but in our opinion they do not merit separate discussion.
Judgment affirmed.