18 Or. 426 | Or. | 1890
This is an action to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff in consequence of a ditch dug across a certain street of said city for the construction of a sewer being left open and without lights or guards, and into which the plaintiff drove his team and seriously injured himself and team. Among other defenses, the main one relied upon, and the only one necessary for us to decide is, that the defendant claims that the act occasioning the injury was caused by one Walter East, to whom the defendant had let a contract for the construction of a sewer, and that by the terms of said contract, the said East was an independent contractor, and as such had the exclusive control of digging said ditch, and the direction and management of the laborers engaged in the work, and that the said contractor is alone liable, and that the plaintiff ought not to have or maintain an action against the defendant. Our inquiry, then, is reduced simply to this: Who is liable to the plaintiff for the injuries he has sustained, the contractor or the defendant ?
Under the first exception, Mr. Dillon, after stating that “the principle of respondent superior does not extend to cases of independent contracts, where the party for whom the work is to be done is not the immediate superior of those guilty of the wrongful act, and has no choice in the selection of workmen and no “control over the manner of doing the work under the contract,” (§ 1028). He adds: “It is important to bear in mind that it does not apply where the contract directly requires the performance of a work intrinsically dangerous, however skillfully performed. In such case the party authorizing the work is justly regarded as the author of the mischief resulting from it, whether he does the work himself or lets it out by contract;. ” Dillon on Munic. Cor., § 1029.
As the case in liand comes under the second exception,
It is true the question is not entirely free from difficulty, and that the doctrine of Barry v. St. Louis, 17 Mo. 121, and Painter v. Mayor, 46 Penn. St. 213, relied upon and cited by counsel for the defendant, sustains their position; but we think the weight of authority, as well as sound reason and public policy, is against them. See Storrs v. Utica, 72 Am. Dec. 441, note; Robbins v. Chicago, 4 Wall. 657; Water Co. v. Ware, 16 Wall. 566; St. Paul v. Seitz, 3 Minn. 297; Mayor v. McCrary, 84 Ala. 470; Mayor v. O'Donald, 53 Md. 110; Logansport v. Dick, 70 Ind. 65; Detroit v. Borey, 9 Mich. 165; Springfield v. LeClaire, 49 Ill. 476; Circleville v. Neuding, 41 Ohio St. 465; Nashville v. Brown, 9 Heisk. 1; Nelson v. Wheeling, 19 W. Va. 323; 2 Dillon Munic. Cor., §§ 1027, 1029, 1030. It is undeniable that the ditch dug across the street for the purpose of constructing the sewer was performed by the contractor under the express authority of the city. It let the contract to him to do the work as specified, and authorized him to excavate the street for that purpose; but the primary obligations to keep the street in a reasonably safe condition for travel devolve upon it by laws from which it could not divorce itself by contract. Such a ditch left uncovered, and not properly lighted or guarded at night, across a public street, necessarily involved great danger and liability to injury to those who might have to travel it. The public have a right to assume that a duty imposed by law is performed, and that in the absence of notice by lights or safeguards that such duty will be attended to, and the street kept in a reasonably safe condition for travel. Such a duty cannot be evaded by contract. When the municipality makes a con-, tract with a person for the construction of a sewer, which necessarily requires an excavation in the street that will render it unsafe and dangerous to travelers at night, unless protected by lights and guards, and such person, although an independent contractor, in the prosecution of the work leaves the street in an unsafe condition for travel, by rea
The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for such further proceedings as may be necessary, in accordance with this opinion.