104 P. 660 | Idaho | 1909
— Respondents recovered judgment in the trial court for $1,500 damages on account of personal injuries received by Olive D. Miller, wife of respondent George T. Miller, by falling on a defective street crossing. Mrs. Miller, in company with her two grown daughters and her infant daughter, was traveling on the Second street crossing over Pine street in the Village of Mullan, and stepped on a board which broke, and fell and broke her leg immediately above the ankle and sustained other bruises and injuries.
On the corner at one end of this crossing stood a candy store, and at the other end of the crossing and on the opposite side of Pine street stood the electric light plant. Mrs.
This particular cross-walk seems to have been quite old, and had some holes broken in it toward the end next to the electric light building, but no one claims that any holes or breaks were visible at the end or near where this board broke and Mrs. Miller received her injuries. After the accident it was discovered that the board was well rotted on the under side and that the sill or cross-piece on which the boards rested at this point was also rotten, and had not been sufficient to support the board with the added weight of Mrs. Miller. No contention is made that there was any patent or visible defect in the crossing at the point where the injury occurred. The cause of action appears to have been prosecuted on the theory that the crossing contained a latent defect, namely, rotten and decayed boards and sills, which an ordinary pedestrian could not, and would not be expected to, discover, but which it was the duty of the village authorities to discover and repair. It is not contended that the authorities had any actual notice of the defect at this place, but it is contended, and there is some evidence to support the contention, that this was an old crossing, and that it was somewhat decayed and out of repair toward the other end from where the acci
It is settled in this state that cities and villages incorporated under the- general law of the state “are liable in damages for a negligent discharge of the duty of keeping streets and alleys in a reasonably safe condition for use by travelers in the usual modes.” (Carson v. City of Genesee, 9 Ida. 214, 108 Am. St. 127, 74 Pac. 862; Moreton v. Village of St. Anthony, 9 Ida. 532, 75 Pac. 262.)
Without negligence there can be no recovery. Negligence may arise out of a failure to act on actual and positive knowledge of a defect or danger in a street or sidewalk, or it may equally arise out of constructive knowledge on the part of the proper village 'or city authorities that a defect or danger exists. (2 Dillon Mun. Corp., sec. 1024; Elliott on Ev., sec. 2513.)
Since it is not contended that the village had actual notice of the decayed and defective condition of the walk at the place where this injury was sustained, the recovery must be had, if at all, on the grounds of constructive notice. The walk was built prior to the incorporation of the village, but no contention is made that the walk was not properly constructed in the first place. In order to hold the village liable, it should be shown that the defect was so obvious or had existed for such a length of time as to indicate that the authorities knew of the danger, and had known it a sufficient length of time to have repaired it. (2 Dillon Mun. Corp., see. 1025; Hanscom v. Boston, 141 Mass. 242, 5. N. E. 249; Jones v. City of Greensborough, 124 N. C. 310, 32 S. E. 675; Cook v. City of Anamosa, 66 Iowa, 427, 23 N. W. 907.) It is common knowledge that the board sidewalks used in the villages and most of the cities of this state will rot and deeay in course of time, but the length of time in which they will become dangerous and unsafe is so indefinite and uncertain and subject to so many influences, either advancing or re
This kind of a case is clearly distinguishable from eases involving the duty to inspect and keep in safe condition coal-holes and trap-doors in sidewalks and bridges and culverts within the city limits. In these latter cases the nature of the place demands a higher degree of care and vigilance, and more frequent inspection than is required for the ordinary sidewalk or street crossing.
In the case at bar, many witnesses testified to passing over this crossing daily and that they had never noticed any defect at or near the place of the accident. Some said the walk as a whole was in fairly good condition, while others said it had holes in it and was in a decayed condition on the side of Pine street next to the electric light plant, and the cause for this was given as being on account of wagons crossing, principally on that side. It seems that teams could not cross on the side next to the candy store. The street commissioner testified that he inspected this crossing about one month prior to the accident and that it was in “very fair condition,”' and that he discovered no danger or defects.
A careful examination of the record fails to disclose any sufficient evidence on which to rest a verdict of negligence on the part of the village in not discovering and repairing this latent defect in the crossing. It may be that the village was in fact negligent in not discovering it and that the respondents can satisfactorily establish such negligence on a new trial, but we would not be justified by the record before
If this court should hold that the municipalities of this state are chargeable with notice of the time when and conditions under which a wooden sidewalk or cross-walk ceases to be safe for pedestrians on account of age and use where no patent or obvious defect is apparent, it would subject them to a hazard, care and expense that but few of them could afford. (Weisse v. Detroit, 105 Mich. 482, 63 N. W. 423; Buckner v. South Bend, 20 Ind. App. 177, 50 N. E. 412.) If, on the contrary, a walk has been used for so long that it is in a general state and condition of decay and disrepair, and is allowed to remain in such condition, notice of such condition will be imputed to the municipality, and if so bad as to be dangerous, such failure to repair or improve it will become negligence. In order to impose liability in such cases as this, the condition of the walk must be such that danger may reasonably be apprehended at any time, and therefore reasonable diligence and prudence would require that it be guarded against. (Stoddard v. Inhabitants of Winchester, 154 Mass. 149, 26 Am. St. 223, 27 N. E. 1014; Rochefort v. Inhabitants of Attleborough, 154 Mass. 140, 26 Am. St. 221, 27 N. E. 1013; Rapho v. Moore, 68 Pa. 408, 8 Am. Rep. 202.)
The necessity for a reversal of this judgment is made moré imperative by reason of the instructions given by the court. In instruction No. 12, given by the court on request of the plaintiff, the jury were told that “If the officers of the defendant did not possess the requisite skill to discharge the duty of inspection, then it was the duty of the officers of said defendant to appoint or provide some one possessing such skill, and to have all sidewalks in the defendant village examined frequently as men of ordinary prudence and care would deem necessary for the safety of the traveling public, and as experience demonstrated the necessity of examination. ’ ’ Here it will be observed that the court required an unusually high degree of skill in the officers of the village, and yet did
It should be remembered that all the officers having anything to do with streets and sidewalks are elective officers with the exception of the street commissioner, and the law prescribes the qualifications of elective officers. No power exists to dismiss or discharge any elective officer. Of course, the street commissioner himself is appointed by the trustees to discharge certain duties; he is under the direction and control of the board of trustees. This part of the instruction was to a degree misleading and deceptive, as was that part of the instruction requiring frequent examinations. The frequency of examinations and inspections depends upon the conditions, location and circumstances surrounding each cause of injury. While prudence would suggest the frequent examination of streets and sidewalks, still a street known to be in general good condition would not require the frequency of inspection and examination that would be necessary for one not in such a state of repair, or one on which the walks are very old and in a state of decay. The question of frequency of examinations necessary to relieve a city of a charge of negligence is one of fact to be determined by the jury in each particular case.
Again, in instruction No. 13, the court instructed the jury “That it is as much the duty of the defendant to keep the sidewalks in the suburbs of the defendant in a safe condition for the use of travelers, as those in the heart of the city; that while the authorities may have a discretion in the matter of pavements or no pavements, yet they have no discretion in the matter of safety; and it is an absolute duty to keep all the sidewalks in the city in a reasonably safe condition for the use of travelers, whether in the heart of the city or near the limits.” This instruction was evidently called forth by the fact that the crossing at which the accident occurred was in the outskirts of the village and, as the witnesses testified, was the last crossing on Pine street. Now, while it is true that the duty to keep sidewalks and crossings in a reasonably safe condition is imperative upon the
“The place where the injury occurred is sometimes an important matter for consideration, especially is it so upon the. question of notice, for what would be negligence respecting a street in a densely populated and much frequented part of a city or incorporated town might not be so in a remote or little used street or alley. In most cases the question of whether the corporations ought to have acquired knowledge is dependent upon the locality and its surroundings, and is generally a question of fact for the jury.”
This position is sustained and approved by the supreme court of appeals of West Virginia in Arthur v. City of Charleston, 46 W. Va. 88, 32 S. E. 1024. See, also, Reed v. Mayor, 31 Hun, 311; 3 Elliott on Evidence, sec. 2514.
In view of the severity of the foregoing instructions given on the request of the plaintiff, the error of the court in modifying the defendant’s requested instruction No. 2 was the more prejudicial in that it tended to center the minds of the jurors on the necessity for the corporation maintaining its walks in á state of absolute safety rather than in a state of reasonable safety, as we understand the true rule to be. The instruction requested by the defendant was as follows: “The jury is instructed that the Village of Mullan cannot be held guilty of negligence for every act or omission which would constitute negligence On the part of an individual. Much discretion is vested in such bodies. For instance: A village is not guilty of negligence for a failure to build sidewalks on all its streets, but when it has constructed a walk
In view of the fact that a new trial must be had in this case, it will be necessary for us to briefly notice some further assignments of error as to the admission and rejection of evidence.-
The defendant demanded, under see. 4209, Rev. Codes, an itemized statement of the claim for $500 paid out and expended for .nurse hire and medical services by the plaintiff. The statement was not furnished within ten days as provided by the statute, but was delivered on the sixteenth day after service of the demand. The ease was not called for trial for about seven months after the service of this itemized statement. At the trial the defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence of this claim or the items composing it on the ground that the statement had not been served within the ten days as required by the statute. The court overruled the objection and admitted the evidence. The appellant assigns the ruling of the court as error.
Without deciding in this case as to whether or not an action for tort falls within the provisions of sec. 4209, we are content to rest our decision sustaining the action of the trial court on the proposition that this provision of the statute is not mandatory but is rather directory. In our opinion, the
Subsequent to the injury and prior to commencing this action, Mrs. Miller filed a claim with the clerk of the board of trustees of the village, demanding payment of damages in the sum for which she subsequently sued. At the trial a copy of the original claim was offered in evidence and introduced as plaintiff’s Exhibit “A.” This copy showed the claim in all respects as regular and the affidavit to the claim filled out in regular form, but there was no name of any officer attached as having administered the oath and attached his jurat. No objection was made to this claim by the board of trustees on the ground that it had not been properly made out and presented. The board acted upon it and rejected the claim and the clerk duly notified the claimants’ counsel that the claim had been rejected. At the trial the defendant objected to the introduction of the copy on the ground that it was not verified as required by law. The contention is made that this claim should have been duly verified and presented to the board of village trustees in conformity with the requirements of sec. 2263, Eev. Codes, which provides as follows:
“All claims against the city or village must be presented to the council or trustees in writing, with a full account of the items, verified by the oath of the claimant, or his agent, that the same is correct, reasonable and just, and no claims or demands shall be audited or allowed unless presented and verified as provided for in this section; and no costs shall*40 be recovered against such city or village in any action brought against it for any unliquidated claim which has not been presented to the city council or board of trustees to be audited, nor upon claims allowed in part, unless the recovery shall be for a greater sum than the amount allowed with interest due.”
It is argued by respondent, however, that the word ‘ ‘ claims ’ ’ as used in this statute does not include torts, and that it was not the legislative intention to require demands for torts to be presented for audit and allowance. "We have examined the authorities bearing on similar statutes very carefully and find a diversity of opinion on this subject among the courts of the several states. The great weight of authority, however, and it seems to us the better and sounder reason, is to the effect that a statute such as ours does not comprehend or include actions ex delicto. The state of Missouri has a statute (sec. 5854, Mo. Rev. Stat. of 1889) in almost the identical language of the foregoing section of our statute, and it has been uniformly held by the courts of that state that it does not apply to actions for tort. (Haggard v. City of Carthage, 168 Mo. 129, 67 S. W. 567; Evans v. City of Joplin, 84 Mo. App. 296.)
The supreme court of Nebraska holds to a similar view under a like statute in that state, and in Nance v. Falls City, 16 Neb. 85, 20 N. W. 109, the court said:
“We think the word ‘claims’ as used in the statute refers alone to those arising upon contract and not to claims arising, as in this case, from a tort. It was not intended that a city council should determine the money value of a person killed through a city’s neglect.”
The supreme court of Oregon, in construing a like statute in that state, held in Sheridan v. City of Salem, 14 Or. 328, 12 Pac. 925, that the word “claim” does not embrace a demand for a personal injury. The court said:
“All claims arising out of the ordinary expenditures of the city are required to be presented to the common council for allowance before an action can be maintained thereon. But that arises out of a relation the claimant sustains to the*41 city, created by an employment or contract of some character. Thus, a person who performs service, or does something for the city, at its request, for which compensation is to be made, tacitly agrees that he will present his claim to the common council for audit and allowance. That is the only mode by which the city can pay him. He so understands it when he engages to perform the service, and he could not claim that there had been a refusal to pay, or that there had been any breach of the contract or obligation, until the common council had refused to audit his demand. But in cases of tort the action is for damages, and the party injured is under no more obligation to present the claim to the corporation than he would be to a private person who had done him a wrong. The reason of the rule only applies to the former class of claims, and not to the latter, — has no application whatever to them.The breach of payment in the action of as-sumpsit is a necessary allegation, but it does not figure at all in an action of trespass on the case. The city only agrees to pay a contracted indebtedness in case the claim is. presented as mentioned, and the action is for a refusal to audit and allow it; but if it commit a tort, the action matures at once.”
The supreme court of Washington in Sutton v. Snohomish, 11 Wash. 24, 48 Am. St. 847, 39 Pac. 273, in passing upon a statute similar to ours, said:
“The demands there spoken of are those arising out of the ordinary transactions of the city, and which may be examined and compared with the vouchers and ‘audited’ and not those resulting from violations of municipal duties.”
The supreme court of Wisconsin has repeatedly held to the same effect. (See Sommers v. City of Marshfield, 90 Wis. 59, 62 N. W. 937, and cases there cited.) It has been uniformly held to the same effect under a like statute in the state of New York.(Taylor v. City of Cohoes, 105 N. Y. 54, 11 N. E. 282, and cases there cited.)
It seems to us that the correct and logical construction to be placed on the language used, in order to arrive at the legislative intent, is to be gathered from the subject matter with which the legislature was dealing. They were provid
We hold, therefore, that it was not necessary, in order to maintain the action, that the claim be presented to the board of trustees for their approval.
Defendant objected to the witness, Dr. Moody, answering the following question: “I will ask you to state to the jury, Doctor, whether or not it was a common knowledge in that vicinity of the bad condition of,the sidewalk in that place in that vicinity.” The court permitted the witness to answer over the objection of the defendant and the answer was as follows: “I have he.ard rumor as to the condition of the sidewalk.” Defendant then moved to strike out the answer. It was further developed on cross-examination of the witness that the “rumor” he had heard with reference to the bad condition of the walk did not apply to the particular place where Mrs. Miller was injured, but to the sidewalk generally in that vicinity, and that the rumors he had heard he could not attribute to any particular person or persons or confine them to any particular part of the walk nor to any specific times or dates. The answers elicited on cross-examination show the uncertainty and unwisdom of such a class of evidence. “Eumors” are too uncertain and indefinite and vague
In a case like this, if the plaintiffs were seeking to recover upon the ground of the obvious and notoriously bad condition of the walk immediately adjacent to or connected with the portion of the walk where the injury occurred, and of which the latter is a part, by reason of its age and state of decay of the whole walk, evidence of this character might be admissible to show such fact, and that although the walk was apparently good at the particular spot where the injury occurred, still that the whole walk was in such a general condition of decay that it amounted to a continuing danger and menace to the traveling public. (Durham v. Spokane, 27 Wash. 615, 68 Pac. 384.)
Complaint is also made by appellant on account of the action of the court in permitting the witness, Doctor Moody,
It was shown on the trial by plaintiff that soon after the accident occurred the village reconstructed a cross-walk over Pine street at the Second street crossing. The defendant sought to show that this was done later in carrying out a general plan of reconstructing sidewalks and cross-walks and general improvement throughout the village. The court rejected the offer. While this was of no great importance, still we think it would have been proper to allow the evidence, for the reason that in cases where it is shown that repairs are made or a new walk is constructed immediately after an accident, juries are likely to conclude that the municipality at once recognized the dangerous condition of the walk, and they take the fact of reconstruction as evidence that the walk was in a dangerous condition. It was also proper for the defendant to show, if it could, that its officers had no notice,
Judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered. Costs awarded to appellant.