25 Wash. 127 | Wash. | 1901
Respondents are husband and wife, and as sncb they jointly instituted tbis suit to recover on account of injuries alleged to bave been received by tbe
Appellant assigns as error: (1) The refusal of the court to sustain its challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, and its motion that the case be withdrawn from the jury and judgment rendered for the defendant; (2) the refusal of the court to instruct the jury to render a verdict for defendant, as requested by the defendant; (3) the ruling of the court during the trial to the effect that testimony as to the existence of other holes in the sidewalk in that vicinity was admissible as evidence against the defendant. We will first discuss the last assignment of error, inasmuch as it challenges the competence of much evidence that went to the jury. It is urged by appellant that any evidence concerning the condition of the sidewalk at any point other than the one where the injury was received is totally inadmissible. Upon the other hand, the respondents urge that it is proper to admit testimony of other defects of long standing and in close proximity to show notice to the city of the general defective condition of the street, and as having some tendency to show notice of the particular defect involved. Under this theory the court permitted the condition of this sidewalk to be shown upon either side of the hole in question, and in front of the same block. A review of the following cases and others shows that the respondents’ theory was¿ by the several courts, sustained: Osborne v. Detroit, 32 Ted. 36; Fuller v. Mayor, etc., of Jackson, 92 Mich. 197 (52 N. W. 1075); Shaw v. President, etc., of the Village of Sun Prairie, 74 Wis. 105 (42 N. W. 271); Munger v. Waterloo, 83 Iowa, 559 (49 N. W. 1028); Gude v. Mankato, 30 Minn. 256 (15 N. W. 175).
In Osborne v. Detroit, supra (decided by the United
“The court was and still is of the opinion that plaintiff was not confined to proving the condition of the walk at the exact spot where the injury occurred. ... Of course, there should be reasoriable discretion exercised in •admitting evidence of the condition of the walk near the accident, but we think, in any case, if it be so near the place of accident that a person examining the walk, or responsible for the condition of the walk in that neighborhood, would be likely also to notice the defect at the spot where the accident occurred, it would be competent.”
In Shaw v. President, etc., supra, at page 107 of the opinion (p. 272 of 42. N. W.) the court says:
“Several objections to the admission of testimony were made on "behalf of the defendant during the trial, based upon the proposition that it was incompetent for the plaintiff to show any defects in the sidewalk, .except at the precise place where the plaintiff was injured. Two rulings upon the subject to which exceptions were duly taken present this proposition for determination. One of these rulings permitted the plaintiff to show the condition of the sidewalk 50 or 60 feet each way from the place of the accident. The other ruling was the admission of evidence of the generally had condition of the same sidewalk from that place south, nearly to the depot. Such testimony was admitted for the purpose of showing constructive notice to the village of the defect in the sidewalk at the place of the injury, there being no proof of actual notice in the case. The proposition' upon which the above exceptions are based, to-wit, that the plaintiff should have been confined in her proofs of the condition of the sidewalk, to the place where she was injured, has been negatived by this court in several cases, and is against the great weight of authority elsewhere. The true rule doubtless is that for the purpose of showing constructive notice to the town or municipality of a defect in one of its highways, other defects therein in the vicinity, or the general bad condition*131 of the same street, sidewalk, or bridge, may be shown. The cases holding this rule are very numerous.”
We think, therefore, that this testimony was admissible as tending to show notice to the city, on the theory that, if the city officials had^exercised proper care in' the inspection of the street, they would have discovered the particular defect. The court limited the testimony to the same block, and we think this was not unreasonable. It is contended by appellant’s counsel, however, that the rule should not apply here, because, as they allege, the hole in question had been in existence but three or four days prior to the accident, and that the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care in examination for general defects would not have led to the discovery of this particular defect within so short a time. There is much conflict in the testimony as to thé length of time a hole had existed there. A number of witnesses for the respondents testified that there had heen a hole at that particular point for weeks, and some even said for months, prior to the time of the accident. It is, however, we believe, clear from the testimony that, whatever may have been the size of the hole that existed there before, the plank at that point was broken by the wheel of a loaded wagon, which passed over it a few days before the accident. This time is variously estimated by the witnesses, ranging from three or four days to a week. The evidence shows that an approach or a driveway had been constructed by some one for the purpose of driving across the sidewalk at this point in order to reach the private inclosure of the adjoining premises, and that a few days before this accident a wagon loaded with wood was driven across it, when one of the wheels broke a plank and left the hole in the condition it was at the time of the accident. Thus, while the hole was undoubtedly made larger by the action of the wagon wheel
“Much depends upon the surroundings in cases of this character, for what might be negligence in not knowing of a dangerous condition of a sidewalk at one locality in the city, would [not] be at another. This walk was much used and resorted to and that called for increased care on the part of the city.”
The time which elapsed in the above case was about four hours, and the court held that the evidence was sufficient to justify the court in submitting the question of the city’s knowledge of the obstruction to the jury. The above may be said to be an extreme case, as the facts surrounding the case occurred upon one of the much traveled streets of the city of St. Louis. It serves, however, to illustrate the principle that no arbitrary rule can be adopted by courts as applying to this question of lapge of time in order to charge a municipality with constructive knowledge. The evidence in this case shows that Tallman avenue, in the city of Ballard, is a much traveled street for a city of that size. One of the public school buildings is located
[Referring again to the matter of the admitted testimony as to other defects than the particular one, we think it is manifest that the jury could not have considered such testimony for any other purpose than that for which the court admitted it. The court gave the following instruction to the jury:
“Before you can find for the plaintiff, you must find that the walk in question, at the time and at the particular place of the alleged injury, was so defective and dangerous as not to be reasonably safe for public travel, and that said defect or dangerous condition of the walk at that place had existed for such a length of time and was so manifest to the senses that the officers and agents of the city could, with reasonable diligence, know, or by the exercise of reasonable care would have known, it in time*134 to have remedied the defect before the accident. There is evidence before you as to the location of the hole in which the plaintiff, Mrs. Laurie, is alleged to have received injuries. I charge you that in arriving at your verdict you have no right to find for the plaintiff on account of any negligence of the defendant, if there was any such negligence, in regard to other holes or defects. Unless you find that the defendant was negligent in respect to the particular hole or defect where the plaintiff, Mrs. Laurie, is alleged to have received her injuries, your verdict must be for the defendant.”
In view of the foregoing instruction, we think no confusion could have existed in the minds of the jury upon this subject.
The evidence clearly shows that Mrs. Laurie received injuries from stepping through the hole in the sidewalk, and, for the reasons heretofore stated, we think the court properly submitted the question of negligence on the part of the city, and also that' of contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Laurie, to the jury, and that it committed no error in denying appellant’s challenge to the evidence, and its motion to withdraw the case from the jury.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.