121 Mass. 442 | Mass. | 1877
The plaintiff was injured by falling into a hole in the sidewalk of a street, which the defendant was bound to keep in repair. There was no evidence that the hole had existed for more than twenty-four hours, or that the city had notice si its existence.
The court properly ruled that, if the earth under the sidewalk . had for more than twenty-four hours been washed away, so as to make ordinary travel presently perilous, it was a defect, for which the city was liable.
The court further instructed the jury that, if the earth under the sidewalk “was in such a condition as that the same might reasonably be expected, through the continued action of such natural causes as were then operating, and such ordinary rains as might be expected to occur at that season of the year, at any hour, to wash out and produce such a cavity as that into which the plaintiff fell, then it is competent for the jury to find an existing defect, for which the defendant in this action may be held liable.” The only question presented to us is as to the cor rectness of this ruling. ,
The ruling authorized the jury to find the defendant liable, although the defect which was the immediate cause of the plaintiff’s injury had not existed for twenty-four hours, and although the sidewalk had not been in a dangerous condition for that length of time. It is based upon the idea that if a road is so constructed that the action of natural causes will produce a defect, and this might reasonably be expected, the town is liable, though it had no notice of such defect, and it had not existed for twenty-four hours. If the liability of towns depended upon the negligence of their agents in constructing or repairing roads, there would be force in this view.
The cases, previously decided by this court, are consistent with this view. The case at bar falls within the principles stated by the court in Ryerson v. Abington, 102 Mass. 526. In that case it appeared that, at the place where the accident occurred, the town had built, under and across the road, a culvert, which was insufficient to carry off the water which might be expected in any ordinary freshet, and that the water had washed away the earth under the road so as to leave a cavity covered by a crust through which the plaintiff broke. The court in the opinion
In Hodgkins v. Rockport, 116 Mass. 573, the plaintiff was injured by stepping with his crutch into a hole in a stone which covered a culvert. This hole was usually covered with a flat stone, which had been removed, in some unknown manner, within twenty-four hours of the accident. The defect which caused the plaintiff’s injury was the hole, and he recovered upon the ground that the hole was not sufficiently guarded, or, as stated in the instructions of the presiding justice of the Superior Court, that “ a hole, covered as this one had been for the time testified to by the witnesses, rendered the way defective.” The hole insecurely guarded was the defect which had existed for more than twenty-four hours, and which caused the plaintiff’s injury.
In Winn v. Lowell, 1 Allen, 177, the defect, if any, was a loose plank in a sidewalk, which had been loose and dangerous for more than twenty-four hours.
The case of Day v. Milford, 5 Allen, 98, more nearly resembles the ease at bar. There the plaintiff was injured by the fall of an awning over a sidewalk upon which snow had collected. He was allowed to recover, although the snow had fallen within twenty-four hours, upon the ground that the awning was so frail that, in the winds and storms ordinarily occurring in this climate, it would be likely to fall upon the traveller. To quote the words of the opinion: “ The defect and want of repair of the highway, by which the safety of the traveller was endangered, were in the state of the awning, and the want of sufficient strength to sustain its own weight and such accumulations as would ordinarily
This case has always been regarded as approaching the extreme limit of the liability of towns, but it does not go so far as the ruling of the Superior Court in the case at bar. The difference between the two may be illustrated by supposing the case of a bridge over a stream built by a town as a part of a highway, If the bridge is built in so frail a manner that, when loaded with the ordinary accumulation of snow, it will not sustain the weight of the traveller, it would be defective, and the town would be liable to the traveller injured thereby. It has not performed the duty required by the statute to provide a way safe and convenient for travellers at all seasons of the year. But if the bridge was built in a strong and substantial manner, so as to be safe at all seasons of the year, it could not be deemed to be defective or in want of repair within the statute, because it was likely that, in time, the water of the stream would undermine the abutments and thus make it insecure.
In the recent case of Blood v. Hubbardston, ante, 233, there was evidence that the town had notice of the defect, by which the plaintiff was injured, the day before the injury, and it was held that the town might be liable, although the defect may have in the meanwhile become more dangerous by the action of the elements. The question raised in the case at bar was not considered. Exceptions sustained.
But see St. 1877, c. 234, passed May 16, 1877.