169 Wis. 379 | Wis. | 1919
There was ample- evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court if the verdict supports the judgment and if the city under the circumstances is liable.
The defendant’s claim is that a municipal corporation is not liable in the performance of a governmental function for the negligence of its officers and agents. It is the settled law of this state that the city, in the maintenance of the bath house and bathing beach in question, was acting in its governmental and not in its proprietary capacity. Bernstein v. Milwaukee, 158 Wis. 576, 149 N. W. 382; Piper v. Madison, 140 Wis. 311, 122 N. W. 730. See note, 25 L. R. A. n. s. 239. It appears that on the day of the accident, July 15, 1916, the work of laying the intake pipe was still in progress and was being done by an independent contractor. Ordinarily where work is performed for a municipal corporation by an independent contractor the city is not liable for damages resulting from the acts of the contractor. Kuehn v.
While the city in its governmental capacity as the proprietor of a bathing beach is not liable for the negligence of its agents and officers, nevertheless, being engaged in the business of furnishing water to private consumers, it is in that respect acting in a private business capacity and it is bound 'to exercise ordinary care, and for failure to exercise ordinary care it is liable for injuries proximately caused by such failure, to the same extent that .a private person or corporation operating a waterworks system would be liable. State Journal P. Co. v. Madison, 148 Wis. 396, 134 N. W. 909.
The city in its proprietary capacity contracted for the extension of its waterworks system across the premises used by the public for bathing purposes. It made no provision for the filling of the excavation, and left upon the premises an excavation which under the circumstances constituted a trap. There was no notice given or attempted to be given of the dangerous condition of the premises, due to the excavation. It appears that the beach for several hundred yards above and below the excavation was frequented by the public for bathing purposes. The construction of this excavation at a point adjacent to the grounds used by the public for bathing purposes, without giving notice of the presence of the danger, constituted a nuisance, and the city is liable for the damages proximately caused thereby. 4 Dillon, Mun. Corp. ( 5th ed.) § 1722. If the work contracted for is .so inherently dangerous as to be Very likely to cause injury unless certain precautions are taken, the municipality is bound to see that these precautions are taken. 19 Ruling Case Law, p. 1140, note 8, and cases cited.
As has already been said, the city is not liable in its governmental capacity for the negligence of its agents and. officers. Therefore, as the owner and operator of the bathing beach it would not be liable for the negligence of its officers in failing to erect suitable barriers or signs indicating the presence of the excavation. The negligence for which the city is liable, if liable at all, is for the maintenance of the excavation and for failure to guard it either by signs or barriers. This grows out of acts done by it in its proprietary capacity, and the verdict does not in form submit to the jury the question of the city’s negligence in this respect. However, the complaint alleged that the city had caused such excavation to be constructed, had negligently failed to require the contractors to properly guard such excavation, and that the city by its officers had control over the method and manner in which the work was being done by the independent contractor.
The single question litigated upon the trial and the point to which the evidence was directed was the liability of the city for maintaining in an unguarded condition the excavation in question. No other act of negligence was alleged or proved. The undisputed evidence shows that if the city was liable at all it was liable for maintaining the excavation without warning or barriers. In submitting the case to the jury the court gave the following instruction with reference to question 1:
“The law does not require nor does the city undertake to make a bathing beach perfectly safe so that no accident can happen. It is sufficient if the bathing beach was made reasonably safe for public bathing by persons in the exercise of ordinary care, and what is reasonably safe is a question for*385 the jury under all the circumstances as shown by the evidence.
“So, gentlemen, you will consider all the evidence bearing upon the question, consider the evidence of the depth of the water, the evidence as to the excavations and holes produced by such excavations, the evidence as to the piles or cork line and cofferdam testified to in the case, and all the other evidence bearing upon the question; consider all the surrounding circumstances as sh.own by the evidence, and then determine from all the evidence in the case, and from the facts and circumstances as disclosed by the evidence, whether or not this bathing beach in question, at the time when Steve Nemet was drowned, was reasonably safe for public bathing by persons in the exercise of ordinary care.”
While the verdict is technically defective, it submitted to the jury the only question upon which the liability of the city is predicated^, to wit, Was the city negligent in the construction of the excavation near the bathing beach and the maintenance of it without proper banders or warning? While the verdict in form found the city liable in its governmental capacity, it found it liable solely'by reason of acts which it committed in its proprietary capacity, for which it was liable as a private corporation would be; and under sec. 2829, Stats., we must regard the error as nonprejudicial.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.