57 N.J.L. 245 | N.J. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a suit by the plaintiff, as administratrix of her deceased husband, against the defendant, to recover damages for his death, alleged to have arisen by reason of the negligence of the defendant as a public corporation.
The declaration avers that on the 31st day of October, 1891, the deceased, whilst a traveler on Olden avenue, in the city of Trenton, passed off a draw-bridge maintained by the defendant on said avenue, which is a public street or highway over the Delaware and Raritan canal, and fell into the canal and was drowned, and that the cause of such death was that the said bridge was so constructed and maintained that the connection formed by the bridge (said bridge, when closed, forming a part of the highway across said canal) between the two parts of Olden avenue became and was removed, and that when said bridge was swung around to allow such vessels as navigated the canal to pass, part of the said bridge projected over the water in said canal, so that passengers on the said part of the said bridge passing towards the said canal, if they passed to and off the end of the said part over the said canal, would fall into the canal, and that the said defendant, in the night time, when the said bridge was opened for vessels to pass the said bridge, negligently suffered the eud of said bridge where it projected over the said canal to be without a parapet, railing, fence or contrivance-to prevent persons passing along and over said bridge toward the said canal from passing off the same into said canal, and without any light, watch or contrivance to warn persons passing along
The defendant demurs to the declaration upon two grounds— first, that in form the declaration does not state a cause of •action, and secondly, upon the ground that the defendant, being a public corporation, is not liable for damages arising from an immediate death resulting from the negligent conduct ■of such corporation.
It is clear that it was the duty of the board of choseñ freeholders of the county of Mercer to construct, maintain •and keep this bridge over this canal in a safe condition for public travel over it. This is conceded by the defendant. The general statute (Rev., p. 86, § 9) provides that “ In all cases where a township or the board of chosen freeholders of a county are chargeable by law with the erection, rebuilding, or repair of any bridge or bridges, and the said township or board of chosen freeholders shall wrongfully neglect to erect, rebuild, repair the same, by reason whereof any person or persons shall receive injury or damage in his or their persons ■or property, he or they may bring his or their action of trespass on the case against the said township, or said board of ■chosen freeholders, as the case may be, and recover judgment against them to the extent of all such damage, sustained as aforesaid, which said judgment shall be paid by the township or county, as the case may be.”
Under this statute the defendant would be liable for neglect in the erection or rebuilding of said bridge, and also under this act liable for any negligent want of repair, or for any neglect to keep the same in a safe condition for public travel. The declaration here shows the respect in which the defendant neglected to keep the bridge in a safe condition, and whether that negligence consisted in a faulty construction of the structure, or want of proper repair, would be of little materiality, save in the manner of proof to demonstrate the
It has been held that it is not necessary that actual notice should have been given of the unsafe condition of a bridge, to the authorities charged with the duty of its repair, or that they should have actual knowledge of the dangerous condition of the bridge, in order that liability to damages be established. If it was originally a faulty or negligent construction the defendant would have been responsible without other notice, and if a repair was necessary in order to render it safe the defendant was bound by the rule of law, that if by the exercise of ordinary care and due diligence the defect could have been discovered, it is sufficient to cause liability for damages-by reason of the neglect to repair. Ripley v. Freeholders, 11 Vroom 45; Jernee v. Monmouth, 23 Id. 553; Freeholders v. Hough, 26 Id. 628, and cases cited.
The declaration, therefore, so far as its formal averments are concerned, displays a sufficient cause of action.
But a more important question arises upon this demurrer. It is insisted that the defendant, as a public corporation, is not answerable for damages, by reason of this death, to the plaintiff herein. It is insisted by the defendant that the word “corporation” used in the act entitled “An act to provide for the recovery of damages in cases where the death of a person-is caused by wrongful act, neglect or default-,” approved March 3d, 1848 (Rev., p. 294, § 1), has no application whatever to, and does not include within its meaning, public municipal, or <7wcm-municipal, corporations, and that the defendant, being a qwcm-public corporation, is not within the provisions of the act, and that, therefore, it is not liable in damages on account of the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, no matter what its
This question arising under this statute does not appear to have been judicially discussed or determined in this state.
The first section of this statute provides, “ Whenever the death of a person shall be caused by wrongful act, neglect or default, is such as would, if death had not ensued, have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages in respect thereof, then and in every such case the person who, or the corporation which, -would have been liable-if death had not ensued, shall be liable to an action for damages, notwithstanding the death of the person injured, although the death shall have been caused under such circumstances as amount in law to felony.”
In the case of Pell v. Newark, 11 Vroom 76, Mr. Justice Van Syckel, in giving construction to the amended constitution of this state, held that the word “ corporation,” as used in article I., paragraph 19, was used and intended in the sense of a private corporation; but this construction was in view of other clauses of the constitstion expressly referring to public corporations, and which demonstrated clearly that the-two classes of corporations, public and private, were dealt with in express terms, as distinct from each other, and such provisions -were made as to both as were deemed necessary and desirable, and thus there remained no reason for construction as to the meaning of the term “ corporations ” as used in that connection. The case of Grosso v. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co., 21 Vroom 317, is insisted upon as-an authority contrary to the position of the plaintiff here, that the language of the act- in "the use of the word “ corporation ” extends its provisions to such public corporations as boards of chosen freeholders of the respective counties.
In that case Mr. Justice Magie has given a thorough examination of the question whether at common law an action would lie for damages caused by an immediate death of a human being, and concludes that no such action could be-maintained, and that the rule of the common law had been-adopted in this country, and that whatever was its original
It will at once be perceived that the principles laid down in that case can have no application to the question here presented.
The statute (Rev., p. 86, § 9) provides for a liability of the Tboards of chosen freeholders, arising from, neglect to erect, rebuild or repair a bridge, which burdens are imposed by this statute upon these ’public corporations, and regard must be had to this act in determining whether the Death act applies to such corporations. The language of the Death act is clear and express that the “ person who, or the corporation which,” whose neglect or default was the cause of the death, should be liable, as they would have been liable for injuries so caused if death had not ensued. Thus within the terms of the act, regarding the statute imposing the burden of building, rebuilding and repairing bridges on the boards of chosen freeholders, and liability for neglect or default in this respect, they are brought within the provisions of the Death act.
This Death act is a remedial statute, to be construed liberally for the suppression of the mischief existing in the common law and the advancement of the remedy (1 Black. Com-86, 87), and being thus remedial in its character and subject to liberal extension in construction, it would be naturally applicable to that class of persons, and those classes of corporations, upon whom a liability for injuries, when death does
Besides, the word “ corporations,” in its general and ordinary sense, embraces both public and private corporations, and there is nothing in the language or spirit of the statute which narrows or restricts this general meaning and confines it to any one class of corporations. The act is intended to give a right of action against persons or corporations against whom a liability existed if death had not ensued, and in the absence of any language in the act which either expressly or impliedly excludes public corporations, it would, upon principle, be clear that they were intended to be and are included within the provisions of the act, which, in its nature, must be liberally and beneficially interpreted; if otherwise interpreted its inherent import would be restricted and the remedy therein provided be materially impaired. A suable wrong ■committed by a public corporation should not become remediless by the death of the person injured. In this case there ■exists no circumstances upon which such a restriction could be based in order to diminish by construction the natural meaning and force of the terms used in the statute. In the construction of a remedial statute, the rule is to avoid all subtle inventions and evasions for the continuance of the mischief and denial of the remedy, et pro private commodo; the duty of the court is to add force and life to the cure and remedy according to the true intent of the maker of the act, pro bono publico. Heydon’s Case, 3 Rep. 76; Plowd. 205; 2 Dall. 316. This act is in the highest sense remedial, and is entitled to receive the liberal construction which appertains to such statutes. Its object was to abolish the harsh and technical rule of the common law, actio personalis moritur cum persona. Haggerty v. Central Railroad Co., 2 Vroom 349.
In státutes relating to the creation of corporations, and to the grant of the ordinary franchises to them, undoubtedly the
The conclusion is that this action is sustainable against the board of chosen freeholders, the defendant, as a public or gucm'-public corporation, and that the declaration shows a legal cause of action.
The demurrer is therefore overruled, with costs to the-plaintiff.