184 Mass. 598 | Mass. | 1904
The plaintiff stumbled over a water shut-off in the sidewalk of Green Street in the defendant city, fell and sustained personal injuries for which she seeks to recover damages in this action. The shut-off was in the travelled part of the sidewalk, and extended above the surface thereof, according to some of the witnesses from a half inch on one side to an inch and a quarter on the other side, and, according to other witnesses, it so extended an inch and a half on one side and two inches on the other. It is not controverted that it was competent for the jury to find that this was a defect. Redford v. Woburn, 176 Mass. 520.
To show that, considering the number of miles of street the defendant had to care for, and the amount available for the work, its failure to remedy the defect ought not to be regarded as a want of reasonable care and diligence on the part of the defendant, it put in evidence, without objection, the number of miles of streets in Woburn, the valuation of the taxable property, the amount of money that could be raised by taxation, and the amount appropriated and expended for highways. This evidence was competent. Rooney v. Randolph, 128 Mass. 580. Hayes v. Cambridge, 136 Mass. 402, and 138 Mass. 461. Sanders v. Palmer, 154 Mass. 475. Weeks v. Needham, 156 Mass. 289.
We see no objection to these questions and answers. They were clearly competent for the purpose of meeting the evidence put in by the defendant, and to show that the city had received from sources other than taxation sums of money which it had applied to remedy defects of the nature of the one in this case. See Hayes v. Cambridge, 138 Mass. 461.
One objection made to the first question was that the fact inquired of could not be proved by oral evidence. In support of this objection the counsel for the defendant has relied upon an ordinance of the defendant city, which he has set forth in his brief, and which requires records to be kept by each department of the city, and accounts to be kept of the money expended. The short answer to this objection is that it does not appear from the bill of exceptions that the ordinance was put in evidence in the Superior Court, nor were the ordinances handed to this court at the argument before us. The court cannot take judicial cognizance of a city ordinance. To admit an ordinance of a city in evidence it must be attested by the clerk of the city. St. 1889, c. 387, § 1. R. L. c. 175, § 73. Nothing of the kind appears here. It is unnecessary to consider, therefore, whether the ordinance, if properly attested and put in evidence, would have had any application to the question asked.
Exceptions overruled.