145 P. 954 | Mont. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
In September, 1912, the city of Butte let a contract to Bard-sen, Hammer and Larson to install a public sewer for the city,
Concerning the path or roadway, the witness Martin testified: “There was a well-beaten road or traveled way leading from Anaconda Road up to my house and on up beyond my house that people traveled on going back and forth from Anaconda Road up to and past my house. There were many people traveled that way. It was the only way to go from Anaconda Road up in that neighborhood. There were a good many houses up
Frank Reynolds testified: “I have known that traveled way leading up from Anaconda Road for about seventeen years.- I traveled over it that long ago, and have traveled over it different times since. It was a well-beaten traveled way. It ran up between two dumps, about twelve or fifteen feet apart, from Anaconda Road up past where Dan Martin’s house is to the neighborhood beyond, and was the only way of going up that way. There is a crossing in the sidewalk where this traveled way leaves Anaconda Road. There were no sidewalks on either side of this traveled way. * # * I have traveled over that traveled way from Anaconda Road up that way in the last seventeen years about four times. After you get up to Dan Martin’s house then the paths branch off different ways to go to the different places and houses in that neighborhood.”
Mrs, Martin and the plaintiff were intimate friends, accustomed to visit each other at their respective homes, and the path or roadway leading to the Martin home from Anaconda Road was well known to the plaintiff. There is not any evidence in the record as to who owned the land at the point where the accident occurred; but defendants had secured a right of way for the sewer, and from that fact it may be inferred that the land was held in private ownership. It was, however, open and uninclosed. There is not any evidence that the owner knew of the use of his property by the people of the vicinity or the existence of the path or roadway, which, so far as the record discloses, was not a public thoroughfare of any character.
Statutory Liability. Section 8535, Revised Codes, provides: “Every person who sinks any shaft or runs any drift or cut, or causes the same to be done, within the limits of any city or town or village in this state, or within one mile of the corporate limits of any city or town, or within three hundred feet of any street, road or public highway, and who shall fail to place a substantial cover over or tight fence around the same, is punishable by a
In every one of the Acts above mentioned, the only things prohibited are sinking a shaft or running a drift or cut. When the statute was first enacted, each of these terms had, and ever since has had, a well-defined and generally understood meaning. Each referred to an operation in mining, and to nothing else; at all times each has been a strictly mining term. In its broad
Liability Under City Ordinance. At the time this accident occurred there was in force an ordinance of the city of Butte
Common-lam Liability. Because of the extreme meagerness of this record and the absence therefrom of material facts which it is apparent could have been proved, we are required to treat this appellant, in the first instance, as a technical trespasser at the time of the accident and determine her rights, if any she has, accordingly. In the absence of any evidence as to the
From the admitted facts, the evidence of plaintiff, and the fair inferences to be drawn therefrom, we conclude that a prima facie case, based upon the defendants’ common-law liability, was made out, and that the trial court erred in sustaining the motion for nonsuit.
In what has preceded we have treated the plaintiff as a technical trespasser. It is an open question whether she was not shown to be a licensee (Carskaddon v. Mills, 5 Ind. App. 22, 31 N. E. 559), or present at the place of danger by the implied invitation of the defendants. [De Tarr v. Heine Brewing Co., 62 Kan. 188, 61 Pac. 689.)
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.