This is an appeal by the defendant City of Los Angeles from a judgment awarding the plaintiff damages in the sum of $1800 for injuries sustained when she slipped and fell on a public sidewalk. The defendant Wyatt, the owner of the property, in front of which the plaintiff met with her accident, received a judgment of nonsuit and is not involved in this appeal.
The accident occurred at approximately 10 o’clock in the morning on January 19, 1934. The sidewalk on Second Avenue had cracked at one of the joints between the panels. *363 One block had tilted up so that there was a difference m grade at the break of not more, and possibly less, than an inch and a half. The plaintiff approached from the north, which was the high side of the break, set her heel on the edge of the break and slipped and fell, suffering the injuries complained of. The court found that this condition was dangerous and constituted a menace to pedestrians using the sidewalk; that the defendant had negligently permitted the dangerous condition to exist without repair for several months prior to January 19, 1934; that the plaintiff was exercising ordinary and reasonable care and was without knowledge of the dangerous condition of the sidewalk, and by reason of the defect stumbled and fell.
Liability is sought to be imposed upon the defendant city under the Public Liability Act of 1923 (Stats. 1923, p. 675, Leering’s Gen. Laws, 1931, Act 5619), section 2 of which renders the city liable for “injuries to persons and property resulting from the dangerous or defective condition of public streets, highways, buildings, grounds, works and property in all cases where . . . the board, officer or person having authority to remedy such condition,
had kowledge or notice of the defective condition . . . and failed or neglected, for a reasonable time after acquiring such knowledge or receiving such notice, to remedy such condition or failed and neglected for a reasonable time after acquiring such knowledge or receiving such notice to take such action as may be reasonably necessary to protect the public against such dangerous and defective condition”.
(Italics added.) This statute constitutes a modification of the rule of nonliability of municipalities for acts performed in a governmental capacity, and recovery" thereunder is only possible where all the requirements conditioning the city’s liability are supplied. It is not enough to show a dangerous condition of the property. “The municipality must have had notice and have failed to exercise its opportunity to remedy the condition. The theory of the act seems to be that liability is imposed not alone for the dangerous condition, but for the failure to remedy it, upon knowledge or notice thereof. The elements of knowledge or notice are logically essential to show culpability in failure to remedy the condition, and proof of one or the other is necessary to recovery.”
(Watson
v.
City of Alameda,
Assuming that the evidence will support the finding of a dangerous and defective condition by reason of the break and elevation in the concrete surface of the sidewalk, it clearly will not support the finding that “the defendant had constructive notice of the said condition of said sidewalk for several- months prior to January 19, 1934, and for at least three months prior thereto”. No attempt has been made to charge the city with actual notice, but respondent relies entirely upon constructive notice arising from the continued existence of this defect through a period described by plaintiff’s witness as “several months”. Even though it be true as said in
Rafferty
v.
City of Marysville,
Constructive notice ordinarily involves, as an essential element, actual notice of facts or circumstances which are sufficient to put a prudent person on inquiry as to the existence of the fact with respect to which he is charged with constructive notice. It is so provided in our code definition. (Civ. Code, see. 19.) In
Wilkerson
v.
Thorp,
Under the rule contended for by respondent the mere existence of a defect, no matter how slight or obscure, for a substantial period of time would be sufficient to charge the city with notice and render it liable for injuries received on account thereof. It is well settled that a municipality is not an insurer of its public ways and is not bound to keep them so as to preclude the possibility of injury or accident. In
Taylor
v.
Manson,
The rule as stated in the eases relied upon by the respondent is that the existence of a conspicuous defect or dangerous condition of a street or sidewalk for a considerable length of time will create a presumption of constructive notice. Consideration of the facts of those cases, however, discloses that there was in each instance a more conspicuous defect
*366
than the one in the instant ease, or there was present an additional factor upon which the constructive notice was predicated. In many there was actual notice, and hence the language with reference to constructive notice is mere
dictum.
In none was the municipality charged with constructive notice upon the basis of the mere existence of a minor defect for a period of several months. In
Boyce
v.
San Diego High School Dist.,
*367
The plaintiff herself testified, and relies upon this testimony to show an absence of contributory negligence, that from the direction from which she approached the sidewalk appeared to be perfectly level. This testimony also tends to show that the defect was not conspicuous and might also go far toward establishing that it might have been overlooked in a reasonable inspection of the city streets. The rule as to the duty to inspect has been well stated in
Davanza
v.
City of Bridgeport,
There is no evidence of any prior event which would put the city on inquiry as to the existence of a dangerous break at this point, and aside from the testimony that it had existed for several months, that it was about an inch and one-half high, and that the plaintiff thought it was caused by the root of a tree growing in the parking beside it, there is no testimony with regard to the defect itself. This, we think, is insufficient to sustain a finding that had the city fulfilled its duty of reasonable inspection and supervision of the streets of the city as a whole it would have had actual knowledge of the break. There is a complete absence of proof as to the method or period of inspection or the nature of the neighborhood in which the defect existed, or the character of the use made of the walks in this neighborhood. Because of the plaintiff’s failure to bring home to the defendant city a neg *368 leet of its duty of inspection or knowledge of facts which would have put it upon inquiry, the city cannot be held to have had constructive notice of the defect and the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.
Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Langdon, J., and Waste, C. J., concurred.
