58 S.E. 912 | N.C. | 1907
We have considered the fifteen exceptions presented in the record in this case, and are of opinion that all of them are without merit. At the close of the evidence the defendant moved to nonsuit, and excepted to the ruling of the court denying the motion. Plaintiff's evidence tends to prove that about 8 o'clock at night, on 4 May, 1905, the plaintiff was returning from her work, on her way home, and was walking on the sidewalk on King Street, in the city of Kinston, when she suddenly fell headforemost into an open ditch 4 1/2 feet deep and 2 1/2 feet wide, extending from the middle of the street across the said sidewalk, from which she was rendered unconscious; that there were no lights, warnings, signals or signs at or near or upon the ditch. This was the usual way which plaintiff returned from her work at night, going home. That she passed the place of injury the morning before she was hurt on the night of 4 May, and there was no ditch or excavation there. The ditch was dug in order to make a sewer connection from the city's main sewer to certain residences on King Street. A permit was granted and issued on 4 May, 1905, to cut the ditch across King Street for that purpose. The work was performed by S. H. Isler, a contractor, who finished digging the ditch and making the connection by 4 p. m. of the same day, and at once, before closing the ditch, verbally notified City inspector Brown to inspect the connections with the city sewer. No written notice was given the inspector, who at the time of the verbal notice was temporarily ill. The inspector did not inspect the ditch that day, and it was left open all night, without lights or other protection.
We do not deem it necessary to notice any matters embraced in the exceptions other than the ruling of his Honor denying the (108) *78 motion to nonsuit, and the seventh exception to that portion of his Honor's charge, as follows: "That the grant of a permit to Isler to make the ditch is notice to the city that the work is in progress, and that thereafter it would be liable for the injuries arising from the negligence of the person doing the work, which is dangerous in itself."
1. The contention of the defendant that it is not liable because the excavation was made across its public street by a contractor who was doing the work for a citizen in order to establish water connection with the city sewer, and that, therefore, the motion to nonsuit should have been allowed, is wholly untenable. To allow such contention would be to relieve the city authorities of one of their most important duties. It is the positive duty of municipal authorities to keep the public streets in a reasonably safe condition, so that the people may pass along them with comparative safety. This duty is not suspended because a private contractor is permitted to open the streets in order to establish water connections with the public sewers. The fact that the contractor may be liable for negligence will not relieve the authorities of the municipality if they are, in law, fixed with knowledge of such negligence.
This is plainly deducible from our own decisions. Bunch v. Edenton,
We think, therefore, upon the facts in evidence, that the court committed no error in overruling the motion to nonsuit.
2. It is further contended that in the part of the charge hereinbefore recited his Honor substantially instructed the jury, as matter of law, that the defendant was fixed with notice of the obstruction or excavation which caused the defendant's injury, and that such instruction is erroneous. We concur with appellant in the construction placed upon the charge excepted to, but we cannot concur in regarding it as erroneous. The question of knowledge upon the part of municipal authorities of defects in the public streets is usually one to be determined by the jury, upon the principles so clearly stated by Mr. Justice Hoke in Fitzgerald v. Concord, supra. But in the case at bar there was nothing in dispute respecting notice for the jury to determine. It is admitted that on the day the excavation was made the defendant issued its permit authorizing *79
it to be done. The defendant's authorities were, therefore, expressly charged with knowledge of the character of the work and its possible dangers to those of the citizens who should use the street, especially after nightfall, as the plaintiff happened to do. A ditch cut across a much used street in a city is necessarily dangerous, and it is the duty of the person doing the work to protect it against accident to those using the street. The duty of a private person is very much the same as that of the city itself when it is prosecuting an improvement. If a private individual fails to protect an excavation in the street, then it is the duty of the city authorities to see that it is protected, and they are held responsible that he should do so, for they were notified that he is going on with the work when he obtains the permit. The city is liable for negligence in failing to exercise supervision and inspection, if injury results by such excavation made by an individual under such permit or license issued by it. South Bend v. Turner, 54 L.R.A., 396; Districtof Columbia v. Woodberry,
Upon a review of the whole record we find
No error.
Cited: Johnson v. Raleigh,