184 P. 542 | Utah | 1919
Lead Opinion
Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by her through the alleged negligence of the defendant.
In substance the complaint alleges that on September 1, 1917, the defendant, a street car company,- removed from its tracks located on State street, Salt Lake City, several cars of dirt and rock, and unlawfully and wrongfully caused the same to be unloaded upon the traveled portion of said street at or near what is known as Oakland avenue, an avenue extending at right angles westward from said State street; that said dirt was wrongfully and negligently permitted to remain upon said street, where it had been dumped and left, until after the accident complained of, without danger signals or other means being taken to prevent persons traveling upon the street from running into it; that said obstruction prevented persons from operating vehicles upon said highway and from having the free use thereof, and rendered the same dangerous to persons operating vehicles thereon. It is further alleged that on September 2, 1917, at about two o ’clock a. m., while the plaintiff was riding on the back seat of a certain motorcycle operated upon said street by one John F. Husbands from Salt Lake City to Murray, said motorcycle ran into and partially over said obstruction, when with great force, the plaintiff was thrown from her seat on the motorcycle to the pavement on said street, and was thereby severely injured, to her damage in the sum of $15,000, for which judgment is prayed.
The answer of the defendant denies negligence on its part, admits the removal of the dirt from the roadbed of its railway tracks on State street, and avers that said dirt so re
The testimony shows that State street is a public thoroughfare running north and south between Salt Lake City and Murray City, upon which at or near the center the defendant has laid and operates a double-tracked street railway. West of the defendant’s car tracks a sixteen-foot cement pavement is laid for vehicle travel. Immediately west of this paved strip there is about twelve or thirteen feet of dirt road, rolled down and also made available for vehicle travel. Oakland avenue is a narrower street than State street, is not paved, and runs at right angles westerly from State street. It has no car tracks upon it. Both State street and Oakland avenue are county roads, within the jurisdiction and under the supervision of the officers of Salt Lake county, and embraced in what is known as road district No. 5. On September 3, 1916, and for some months prior thereto the officials of Salt Lake county were engaged in the improvement of both State street and Oakland avenue. The work was being carried on under the immediate supervision of William IT. Smith, the county road supervisor of said district No. 5, under the orders and direction of the county commissioners of Salt Lake county. On said day, at about twelve o ’clock noon, the defendant, pursuant to an order made by and under the direction of the said county officials, removed from-its tracks on State street eight cars of dirt and rock, and hauled and dumped them on said State street at or near Oakland avenue, at the place designated by the county officials. As we read the record, as had been the custom, after the dirt had been dumped by the defendant railway company, the county officials took charge of the dirt, removed it by teams from the car tracks so as not to
After the dirt had been dumped from defendant’s cars and was taken in charge by the county officials, the defendant exercised no further control nor supervision over it. William H. Smith, the county road supervisor, testified:
“I was apprised tliat the dirt had heen delivered as I was going home from town. That was twelve o’clock noon. I shoveled up the loose dirt on the west side and straightened it up. * * * I was going to use the dirt on Oakland avenue for the purpose of grading.”
The dirt was left upon the highway rough and uneven, and no warning or danger signals were placed upon it during the daytime of September 1st, nor during the night-time following. The testimony further shows that on all previous occasions when the defendant had hauled material for the county, under direction of county officials, for the improvement of the highways, after delivery of the material, danger signals or lights were placed upon it by the county road supervisor. On September 2, 1917, at about one-thirty o’clock a. m. the morning following the delivery of the dirt, Mrs. Shepard, the plaintiff, at the invitation of a Mr. Husbands, a police officer, mounted and seated herself on the rear seat of a motorcycle at the corner of Second East and Second South streets in Salt Lake City. The motorcycle was then.driven by Husbands south on the west side of State street toward Murray as far as Oakland avenue, where they ran into the dirt and rock thus left lying on State street, and were thrown from the motorcycle to the pavement. The plaintiff was seriously .injured. The testimony further shows that during the nighttime other motor vehicles ran into the same obstruction and were wrecked. The county road supervisor, when asked concerning why he had failed to place lights upon the material
“Q. On this dirt that has been referred to in this case did you place red lights upon that dirt on the night of the accident? A. No, sir. Q. Why not, Mr. Smith? A. I forgot it. The first time that I forgot such a thing, hut I forgot it that night.”
The trial of the case was to a jury. At the conclusion of the testimony defendant moved for a directed verdict, whereupon the court directed, and the jury returned, its verdict, no cause of- action.
The assignments of error relied upon by the plaintiff all challenge the action of the court in directing a verdict for the defendant. The question raised, therefore, on appeal is whether or not the defendant as a matter of law can
This is the second time the case has been presented to this court for review. The first time by a unanimous court the order was made that the judgment of the district court be affirmed. Upon application of the plaintiff a rehearing was granted and the case re-argued. Upon the former hearing the plaintiff made the contention, and still’contends, that the act of the defendant in hauling the dirt and dumping it upon the street was wrongful, that it thereby created a public nuisance, and that it must be held to answer in damages to any person who was injured thereby. In our former opinion we made the statement that—
“Leaving the rock and dirt upon the highway without danger signals or other precautionary methods taken to warn the traveling public of its presence constituted a public nuisance.”
We then held that the act of the defendant in dumping the dirt from its cars, under orders from the county officials, for the purpose of improving and repairing the streets, was lawful, and as we then thought clearly pointed out that the wrong - committed and the nuisance created was the leaving of the material in the street during the night-time without lights or other danger- signals to warn travelers of its presence. It is the contention of the plaintiff that the hauling and dumping
The eases cited shed very little light on the questions involved in this action. All of these authorities announce and adhere to the well-established doctrine that one who wrongfully places or leaves an obstruction in a highway becomes liable to the persons sustaining injuries thereby. No criticism is to be made of the authorities cited and the principles announced by them, for they deal with unlawful acts and the liability of persons committing them, as contradistinguished from lawful acts committed in a lawful manner.
We held in our former opinion in this case that the acts of the defendant were lawful in removing the dirt from its roadbed and hauling and dumping it from its cars on the highway by direction of the county officials to be used for the,improvement and repair of streets within the jurisdiction and under the supervision of the latter; that these acts of the defendant were not only lawful, but were performed in a lawful manner. Plaintiff did not before, nor does she now, cite us to a single authority holding that where the facts and circumstances are like or similar to those in the case we have under considera
By subdivision 24 of section 511, Comp. Laws Utah 1907, as amended by Laws Utah 1911, section 511s, p. 198, it is provided that the board of county commissioners shall have jurisdiction over the county roads, and the following powers:
“To lay out, maintain, control, erect, and manage public roads, turnpikes, ferries and bridges witbin the county outside of the incorporated cities. * * * ”
By chapter 118 of Laws Utah 1909, entitled “Powers of county commissioners as to roads, ” it is provided:
“Sec. 1. Each board of county commissioners shall by proper regulations: 1. Appoint a county road commissioner. * * * 2. Cause to be * * * maintained and worked such public roads as are necessary for public convenience.”
“Sec. 4. The county road commissioner, under the direction and supervision of the board of ^county commissioners, shall: 1. Take charge of the public roads within the county, and employ and direct such competent help as may be necessary to properly perform his duties. * * * 4. Keep the roads clean of obstructions and in good repair. 5. Cause the roads to be graded * * * and keep the same in repair and renew them when necessary.”
The county officials have the lawful right to temporarily obstruct- the highways under their jurisdiction for the purpose of making improvements and repairs, and this
In the case before us the testimony clearly shows that the only acts the defendant was engaged in were the taking of the material from its ''roadbed, hauling and delivering it on State street to be received, taken, and used for the improvement of the public roads under the jurisdiction of county officials duly authorized and charged with the duty of supervis
On principle we are unable to distinguish between a street car company delivering material to the legally authorized county officials directly engaged in the repair and improvement of the county highways within their jurisdiction (upon whom rests the statutory duty to “take charge of public roads” and “keep the roads clear of obstruction and in good repair”) and the laborer who performs his work in a lawful manner or the merchant or materialman furnishing and delivering tools and material in a lawful way for the improvement of the public highways. Throughout this state at the present time thousands of men are employed in digging and plowing up the highways; many teamsters are engaged in hauling and delivering sand,, rock, cement and other materials upon them; machinery and other equipment are being sold and delivered by merchants at points designated, all "to be used in and for the improvement of the public roads. This
We do not wish to be understood as holding, nor do we hold, that work performed on the public highways is an unlawful manner or for no lawful purpose is to be justified
But the plaintiff strenuously contends that the act of the defendant in delivering material on State street to be used on Oakland avenue was a wrongful act; that while it is permissible under the law to temporarily obstruct the highways for the purpose of making improvements and repairs the rule cannot be extended so as to permit the depositing of materials on one highway for the improvement of another. No case in which this question was directly before the court is cited in plaintiff’s brief. ’ The ease cited (Louisville v. Tompkins, supra), upon which plaintiff seems to rely, announces the doctrine, but in that case the question was not properly raised,
"We have carefully considered the many cases to which we are cited by plaintiff’s brief, but we have not paused to discuss them for the reason that the principles of law they announce are applied to facts and circumstances entirely different from those we have under consideration in the case at bar. After carefully reviewing the authorities cited and the principles of law they announce, we feel convinced that they cannot properly be applied to the facts and circumstances of the ease at bar and under which the plaintiff seeks to recover damages at the hands of the defendant.
It therefore follows that the order of the district court directing a verdict for the defendant was right, and the judgment entered thereon should be affirmed, with costs to defendant. It is so ordered. It is further ordered that the foregoing opinion be substituted for the former opinion herein-before referred to, and this opinion shall be the opinion officially published.
After considerable hesitation, and, I may say, with some reluctance, I am forced to the conclusion that the Chief Justice is right. In concurring in the former opinion I did so upon the sole ground that, the county being immune, therefore the defendant was likewise so. I am now convinced that my conclusion in that regard was erroneous, and that the immunity of the county afforded the defendant no protection if it, as a matter of law, can be held liable. The difficulty that confronts me, however, is to find authority in law for holding the defendant liable. It is quite true that the law is well settled that “an individual who erects an unlawful obstruction to the free use of a highway, in its nature a nuisance, by reason of Ms wrongful act is charged in law as an insurer against accident to a person properly traveling the highway
Reported in full in the New York Supplement; reported as a memorandum decision without opinion in 58 Hun, 602.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
The controlling question for determination in this ease, as I view it, is: Did the county commissioners of Salt Lake county, as the custodians of the public highways in said county, have the lawful right to direct the defendant company to dump dirt from its ears upon State street to be used in the repair of Oakland avenue, a street running at right angles with said State street?
I concurred in the former opinion affirming the judgment of the district court with some doubt as to the correctness of the conclusions reached. After the reargument and a further examination of the authorities, and of the principles which in my judgment are involved, I am convinced that the former decision ought not to stand as the law of this ease.
It is conceded that the county commissioners of this state have control of the public highways in their respective counties. The purpose of the law delegating that authority and duty is that some public officer or commission shall be charged with the duty of keeping the highways in repair for the public convenience and travel. It may also be admitted as a legal proposition that the county commissioners have the right to temporarily obstruct any highway for the purpose of making public improvements and all needed repairs. Otherwise the very object sought by granting the power would be defeated, namely, the duty to keep the highways suitable for travel. Keeping in mind the purpose for which highways are constructed and kept in repair, namely, for the safety and convenience of the public traveling on said highways, it must logically follow that public officers charged with the duty of keeping such highways in repair, in the performance of that duty, must so perform their respective duties as not to trespass upon or interfere with the rights of the public to any greater extent than is absolutely necessary for such improvements. ' Repairing highways is a duty imposed by law, and no right exists in a public official to obstruct a highway except as the same is necessary to perform the duty of repairing such highway. No one will contend that it was absolutely neces
It is admitted that the dirt dumped by the defendant company from its cars upon State street was not to be used for the repair of that street, but was to be used in repairing Oakland avenue, and that fact was known to the company at the time. It is not contended that the defendant company had any right to deposit the dirt on said street except by and under the arrangement with the county commissioners who assumed to grant it such right. If the commissioners were not lawfully exercising a power vested in them, then the defendant company, by throwing the dirt upon such street along a part of the street used by the public, was thereby acting without lawful authority. If such be the fact I can see no escape from the conclusion that of necessity the defendant company would be liable for any injury caused by such obstruction to any one traveling upon that highway, unless such injury resulted from some act of negligence of the party injured or some other person for "whose conduct or acts such injured person is responsible. If the county commissioners were not lawfully exercising their authority in so obstructing State street, then it must follow that the defendant company was not doing a lawful act at the time it unloaded the dirt upon that street. The commissioners being "without right or legal authority to so obstruct the street, it necessarily follows that the agent directed by such principal cannot justify its acts and absolve itself from liability by relying upon and pleading the unauthorized act of the party or person who directed such unlawful act. 1 Mechem, Agency (2d Ed.) section 1455; Baird v. Shipman, 132 Ill. 16, 23 N. E. 384, 7 L. R. A. 128, 22 Am. St. Rep. 504; Ellis v. McNaughton, 76 Mich. 237, 42 N. W. 1113, 15 Am. St. Rep. 308; note 32 L. R. A. (N. S.) 972.
The authorities relied on by respondent do not, in my judgment,'justify or support its contention. The authorities cited simply announce the general rule that public officials have the right to make needed repairs and for that purpose to obstruct a highway even at the inconvenience of the public. No one disputes that proposition. As pointed out, that would simply be performing a public duty. No authority is cited holding a defendant free from liability under facts similar to the facts shown in this case.
The authorities relied on by appellant possibly do not discuss facts similar to the facts involved here. In City of Louisville v. Tompkins (Ky.) 122 S. W. 174, the court seems to have accepted as elementary the rule that the public officials have no right to place material on one street or highway to be used in repairing another street or highway. In principle, in my judgment, that must be so. The officials are required to keep the highways free from obstruction so as not to interfere with the convenience of the traveling public, and the only exception to that rule is when it is necessary to close or obstruct a highway while making needed repairs or making pub-lie improvements.
I am unable to follow the reasoning whereby it is concluded that by depositing the dirt upon State street the defendant company did not invade the rights of the public, including plaintiff!. The highway was there, and the plaintiff had the right to travel it and to assume that it was in a reasonably safe condition for travel. By the defendant’s acts the highway was rendered dangerous. Now, how can it be said that the plaintiff’s rights were not invadedÍ The defendant does not, as I understand its position, so contend. It claims only
It is also claimed that to hold the defendant company liable under the facts as disclosed by this record would of necessity make any one liable, even an ordinary teamster who might haul a load of sand and dump it upon the street in front of some citizen’s residence when he was directed to so do by the owner of the property whose property or sidewalk was to be repaired, for which purpose the sand was to be used. Conceding that such would be the result, is there, any logical reason why a teamster who, without authority, invades the rights of another and injury results should be held free from liability 1
The right of the plaintiff to travel upon the highway when the injury occurred cannot be and is not disputed. That right was invaded or obstructed by the dirt thrown upon the highway by the- defendant company. The justification for such trespass is, in my opinion, based on an unauthorized and illegal act of a public official. That ought not to be held a defense. State street is the main public highway running south from Salt Lake City to Murray City and other towns in the southern part of Salt Lake county. There are many other highways intersecting it from the east and west. To apply the results of the majority opinion to the facts as they exist would give the defendant company and the county officials the right to dump materials on State street for the improvement of all intersecting streets along defendant’s line of railway on State street. In other words, respondent and the county officials could rightfully and lawfully use State street between the southern limits of Salt Lake City and the southern boundary of the county as a station or dumping ground from which to haul material to all parts of the county, however remote.
In Wilson v. West & Slade Mill Co., 28 Wash, 312, 68 Pac. 716, the Supreme Court of Washington has stated the rule of law governing the duty and liability of parties obstructing a
"One who, 'by himself, or jointly with another or others, places an obstruction in a public street, is in- law under an obligation to remove it, and is liable for any damage occasioned thereby during the continuance of the obstruction. The fact that he may have no interest in its maintenance after its creation does not relieve him from such liability.” '
See, also, 13 R. C. L. p. 224, section 190.
In my opinion the judgment of the lower court in this case should be reversed, and a new trial granted. I therefore dissent.