231 N.W. 935 | S.D. | 1930
Defendant appeals from an order overruling a general demurrer to the complaint in an action for personal injuries caused by an alleged defective sidewalk.
The complaint alleges the construction by defendant of a concrete sidewalk five feet wide in the year rci03, that it was negligently constructed in the following particular: That, instead of being built level, it was at the place of the accident made round and
Appellant contends that, where a city adopts a plan for constructing a sidewalk, it is not liable for injuries resulting from defect in the plan unless the plan is so- manifestly dangerous that the court can say, as a matter of law, that the plan was dangerous and unsafe. But, if the plan of construction of the sidewalk called for the round- and sloping edges at the place of the accident, and required the sidewalk to pass over the culvert, there is nothing in the complaint that shows that the plan required the deep and dangerous hole that is alleged to have existed at the place to- be left unguarded and unprotected. It is evident from the allegations of the complaint that the sloping and rounding edges of the sidewalk at this point would not have caused the injuries that plaintiff suffered had it not been for the deep and dangerous hole into which he fell. It was the falling into this hole that broke his leg and caused the other injuries of which he complains. Appellant contends that the accident occurred at a street crossing, and that the dangerous hole was merely a gutter that passed under the sidewalk to carry off water in time of rain, and that it would have been impractical to have placed guard rails at an ordinary street crossing. There is nothing in the complaint from which it may be inferred that the place of accident was an ordinary street crossing, and in fact the allegations of the -complaint seem inconsistent with
Appellant further criticizes the complaint because it does not appear therefrom in what manner plaintiff fell into the hole. It is said there is no allegation as to what caused him to step off into the culvert except that it was dark and there was no1 street light at the corner, that it is not stated.1 whether plaintiff lost his balance and fell into the ditch or stepped off the sidewalk into the ditch, and that there is no allegation as to what caused him to fall. But this simply amounts to a statement that the complaint is indefinite and uncertain as to the manner in which plaintiff fell into the hole. The ultimate fact that he did fall in is properly pleaded, as is also the fact that the hole was in the immediate proximity of the sidewalk so that a single misstep or the losing of one’s balance while walking near the edge of the sidewalk might result in falling into the hole. Indefiniteness and uncertainty cannot be taken advantage of by demurrer. Akre v. Thompson, 53 S. D. 518, 221 N. W. 249.
In Braatz v. City of Fargo, 19 N. D. 538, 123 N. W. 1042, 1044, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1169, there is the following quotation from 2 Dillon Municipal Corporations (4th Ed.) § 1019: “A municipal corporation is not an insurer against accidents upon the streets and sidewalks. Nor is every defect therein, though it may cause the injury sued for, actionable. It is sufficient, we think, if the streets (which include sidewalks and bridges thereon) are in a reasonably safe condition for travel in the ordinary modes, by night as well as by day, and whether they are so or not is a practical question, to be determined' in each case by its particular circumstances.”
Under the allegations of the complaint in the instant case the sidewalk was not in a reasonably safe condition for travel by night. We must take the allegations of the complaint as they appear in the record, and the reasonable inference from those allegations is that the hole was not the ordinary gutter, but that it existed by the side of the walk, not at a crossing, but at a place between two streets which cross the street on which the accident occurred.