76 Wash. 396 | Wash. | 1913
The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from a fall upon a sidewalk upon one of the streets of the defendant, a city of the third class. She alleges that she sustained the injury in consequence of
After the jury had been impaneled and sworn, and after counsel for the plaintiff had made his opening statement and introduced his first witness, counsel for the city objected to the introduction of any evidence, (1) because the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and (£) because of the failure of the plaintiff to present her claim within the time prescribed by statute. The court sustained the objection, but gave the plaintiff the privilege of amending her complaint. This she declined to do; whereupon a judgment was entered dismissing the action.
Our statute, Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7998 (P. C. 77 § 57), provides that:
“All claims for damages against any city or town of the second, third or fourth class must be presented to the city or town council and filed with the city or town clerk within thirty days after the time when such claim for damages accrued, . . .”
We have held that the thirty-day limitation in this statute is mandatory; that the statute is clear, definite, and precise in its terms; that a compliance with its provisions is “a con
The appellant invites us to apply this rule of interpretation to the statute. . This we cannot do without trenching upon powers vested exclusively in a coordinate branch of the state government. When the law-making branch of the government has spoken, the courts may interpret, but cannot add to or take from, the clear and unambiguous meaning of the law. To do so would be legislation rather than interpretation. The policy, expediency, and wisdom of a statute are legislative and not judicial questions. Point Roberts Fishing Co. v. George & Barker Co., 28 Wash. 200, 68 Pac. 438.
In State v. Carey, 4 Wash. 424, 30 Pac. 729, addressing itself to this question, the court said:
“Yet, conceding the right of the legislature to legislate upon the subject, the wisdom of the act, its reasonableness or unreasonableness is a question for legislative discretion, and not for judicial determination. Judge Cooley says, in his work on Constitutional Limitations (5th ed., page 201) : ‘The judiciary can only arrest the execution of a statute when it conflicts with the constitution. It cannot run a race of opinions upon points of right, reason and expediency with the lawmaking power.’ ”
Courts of other jurisdictions have construed similar statutes, varying slightly in- phraseology, in harmony with our construction of this statute. Schmidt v. Fremont, 70 Neb. 577, 97 N. W. 830; Ellis v. Kearney, 80 Neb. 51, 113
In the Schmidt, McCollum and Ellis cases, it was held that incapacity, caused by the injury which formed the basis of the suit, did not excuse a failure to give the notice within the time prescribed by the statute. In Davidson v. Muskegon, 111 Mich. 454, 69 N. W. 670, and Winter v. Niagara Falls, 190 N. Y. 198, 82 N. E. 1101, 123 Am. St. 540, the same rule was applied to infants. In Morgan v. Des Moines, 60 Fed. 208, the statute was held a bar to a suit by an infant four years of age who hasd not complied with the terms of the statute. In the McCollum case the court said:
“The effect of the holding is that the legislature may fix a limitation applicable to all, and that exceptions omitted from the statute do not exist.”
In the Ellis case, the same view is expressed in the following language: “It is not the province of the courts to make the law, or read into it exceptions not intended by the lawmakers.” In the Schmidt case, the court observed that it had no power to “engraft an exception upon it [the statute] by construction.”
The appellant argues that, because we have held that there is a common law liability upon a municipality failing to maintain its highways in reasonably safe condition for travel (Collins v. Spokane, supra, and kindred cases), the cases from other jurisdiction's, such as Nebraska and Indiana, where the liability of a municipality for defective streets is held to exist only'in virtue of the statute, are not directly in point. To the extent that they announce the
It is also argued that the statute should be interpreted according to its spirit rather than its letter, citing, among other cases, Giuricevic v. Tacoma, 57 Wash. 329, 106 Pac. 908, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 533. We there said that, in interpreting a statute, the court should keep in mind “the mischief to be met.” The mischief which the statute seeks to avoid is the presentation of claims long after the accident occurred, and at a time when the opportunity for investigating the merits of the claim and the claimant may well be presumed to have been lost or much abridged.
The New York courts have held that a failure to serve a preliminary notice required by a legislative charter (within forty-eight hours after the happening of the accident) is not a bar to an action where the injured party was unable to transact business during the time fixed in the charter for the service of the notice. Walden v. Jamestown, 178 N. Y. 213, 70 N. E. 466. This holding was rested upon two maxims of the law: (a) “That a thing which is in the letter of a statute is not within the statute itself unless it is within the intention of the statute makers,” and (b) that the law does not seek “to compel a man to do that which he cannot possibly perform.” These are sound maxims when soundly applied. There is another maxim, however, which we apprehend is even more potent, viz., that the legislature is presumed to have meant what it said. The notice in that case was served seventy-two hours after the accident occurred. The court said that this “was a substantial compliance with the statute.”
We feel constrained to adopt the view that the legislature thought it best not to except éither incapacity or disability. Affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Main, Elms, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.