Plаintiff, Mae Maxey, instituted this action against the defendant, the City of Blnefield, in the Circuit Court of Mercer County to recover for personal injuries sustained when she fell as a result of a sidewalk allegedly out of repair. The city, prior to answering, moved for leave as a third-party plaintiff to serve a complaint upon General Telephone Company of the Southeast and Blnefield Sanitarium, Inс., and to join them as third-party defendants to the action which motion was granted.
The third-party complaint alleges that the location of plaintiff’s fall was on the sidewalk abutting the properties of the third-party defendants and any defect in such sidewalk was the result of negligence on the part of those defendants and also, irrespective of any negligence, at the time of plaintiff’s fall there was in effect an allegedly valid ordinance of the City of Blnefield which provides:
“It shall he the duty of the owners of real estate abutting on any sidewalk to keep the sidewalk and driveway entranсe or apron adjacent to their properties in good repair. Any property owner failing to keep the sidewalk or driveway area adjacent to his property in repair shаll he liable to reimburse the City, for all loss that it may sustain, or any damage, cost, or expenses that may he imposed upon it by reason of the failure of the property owner to perform such duty.”
Thе complaint then concluded that by reason of the above allegations the third-party defendants are liable to fully reimburse the City for any damages or loss sustained or, in the alternative, to contribute pro rata to the plaintiff for any damages she may have sustained.
*304 The third-party defendants moved separately to vacate the order joining them as third-party defendants and to dismiss the third-pаrty complaint, which motions were sustained by the court and, on its own motion, the court certified the questions of law arising thereon to this Court.
Despite the collateral issues necessarily raised, which wеre very ably briefed and argued by counsel for all parties, the essence of the questions certified is the applicability of Buie 14(a), B.C.P., which provides that a defendant may make a motion “. . . for lеave as a third-party plaintiff to serve a summons and complaint upon a person not a party to the action who is or may be liable to him for all or part of the plaintiff’s claim against him. . . ” (Italics supplied.) The italicized words have caused much concern to the members of this Court in reaching a decision in this case, however, the gist of the third-party complaint, in effect, grounds such possible liability of thе abutting property owners to the city upon the ordinance heretofore quoted. We are presented initially then with the question of the validity of the ordinance.
Chapter 8, Article 8, Section 1, of the Code, as amended, authorizes municipalities “to grade, regrade, pave or repave, surface or resurface, curb or recurb, streets and alleys, and to build or renew sidewalks, . . . and tо assess the costs of any or all of such improvements on abutting property.” Chapter 8, Article 4, Section 10, as amended, authorizes the council of a municipality “. . . to order the sidewalks [to be] . . . kеpt in good order, free and clean, by the owners and occupants thereof, or of the real property next adjacent thereto. ...” Section 46 of the Charter of the City of Bluefield, as amended by the legislature on April 1, 1921, in effect from passage and quoted in the opinion of the trial court, provides that the board of directors of the City of Bluefield may by ordinance lay out streets, wаlks, alleys, etc., “. . . and cause them to be kept open and in good repair, and generally ordain
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and enforce such regulations respecting the same, or any of them, as shall be proper for the health, interest or convenience of the inhabitants of said city.” Section 54 of said charter provides that: “The board of directors shall have power, by ordinance,... to require thе owner or owners of property adjacent to any paved sidewalk ... to keep such sidewalk in repair, and in default of his or their so doing, to cause the same to be repaired, and аssess the cost thereof upon such owner or owners. ’ ’ There can be no question but that the City of Bluefield, under these statutes and charter provisions, is empowered to require by ordinance abutting рroperty owners to maintain a sidewalk in front of their property in a state of good repair, and that the violation of such ordinance gives rise to a cause of action to a pеrson injured as a consequence thereof against the property owner.
Costello v. City of Wheeling,
In the case of
Hyre v. Brown,
But, it is contended, that the words “may he liable” as used in Rule 14(a), R.C.P., nevertheless, properly permit the joinder of the third-party defendants herein for the purpose of determining to what extent, if any, the third-party defendants may he liable to the city for the injuries sustained by the plaintiff. As pointed out in the
Costello
and other cases hereinbefore cited, the valid portion of the ordinance does give rise to a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff against the third-party defendants and their liability is joint and several with that of the city.
Johnson v. City of Huntington,
Rulings affirmed.
