51 Wis. 691 | Wis. | 1881
This action was commenced under the provisions of section 1, subch. VII, ch. 184, Laws of 1874, which reads as follows:
“ Section 1. Whenever any injury shall happen to persons or property in said city of Milwaukee, by reason of any defect or incumbrance of any street, sidewalk, alley or public ground, or from any other cause for which the said city would be liable, and such defect, incumbrance or other cause of such injury shall arise from or be produced by the wrong, default dr negligence of any person or corporation, such person or corporation so guilty of such wrong, default or negligence, shall be primarily liable for all damages for such imgury; and the said city shall not be liable therefor until after all legal remedies shall have been exhausted to collect such damages from such person or corporation.”
The allegations of the complaint show that the injury complained of in this case was caused by the negligence and default of one Leander Comstock, who placed the obstruction in the street which caused the injury to the plaintiff; that such obstruction was so placed by said Comstock without the per
After giving the statute a careful consideration, we have come to the conclusion that the act was passed for the purpose of relieving the city as far as possible, with justice to tlié injured party, from liability for injuries occasioned by obstructions unlawfully placed in its streets by persons for whose acts it is not directly responsible, and, whenever the person injured can, by the use of the remedies furnished him by the law, recover his damages of the party primarily in fault, and there.fore primarily liable, from all liability whatsoever. This being "the object of the act, it is the duty of the courts to construe it so as to reasonably accomplish that purpose. We must therefore hold that the person injured must not only prosecute his action to judgment against the original wrongdoer, but must also use reasonable diligence in prosecuting such action, in order to render the city ultimately liable to him for his dapages. Under this rule the complaint is defective, and
The law'places the city in the position of a guarantor of the collection of the plaintiff’s damages from the original wrongdoer. It expressly says the city shall not be liable until after all legal remedies shall be exhausted to collect such damages of the wrongdoer.’ This is exactly what the law requires shall be done by the person holding a claim which a third person has guarantied the collection of. The statute in this case has made the city only liable when the damages cannot be collected of the person primarily liable for the injury, after all legal remedies have been exhausted against him. A party cannot be said to have exhausted all legal remedies.against the person primarily liable, unless he prosecutes his action with due diligence. The necessity of diligence on the part of the plaintiff in prosecuting his remedy against such person, before resorting to the city, does not depend upon the question whether the
The long delay shown in this case, without any excuse therefor, raises a legal presumption of injury to the defendant, and the proof of all the facts stated in the complaint would not entitle the plaintiff to judgment. It is urged by the learned counsel for the appellant, that because the city is liable for its neglect in not removing the obstruction in its streets, therefore it stands in the relation of a guarantor of the payment of the damages, rather than as a guarantor of the collection of the damages of the original wrong doer; but this view of the question we think.cannot be sustained upon the language of the statute. The statute does not make the city liable for the
By the Court. — The order of the county court is affirmed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.