102 P.2d 213 | Or. | 1940
This is an action by Mabel F. Thomas against the city of La Grande to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by her when thrown from a swing operated by a carnival company under the auspices of the American Legion upon one of the streets of defendant, city. A demurrer to plaintiff's second amended complaint having been sustained, plaintiff declined to plead further and a judgment of dismissal was rendered. From this judgment plaintiff appeals.
In her second amended complaint, plaintiff alleged the municipal character of defendant, the provisions of its charter authorizing defendant to license, tax and regulate places of public amusement and entertainment, to purchase sites for public purposes and to provide for the government and management of the same, to purchase, take, hold and sell real property when sold for delinquent taxes or assessments levied or imposed under the authority of the city of La Grande, to prevent and remove nuisances, to regulate the use of streets, roads, highways, and public places, to grade, pave and otherwise improve streets, to acquire title in the manner provided by law to land for public purposes, and to lay out, improve and have exclusive control of the same.
It is also alleged in the plaintiff's second amended complaint that, since about 1930, defendant city has been and now is the owner in possession and having exclusive control of Block 10, Riverside Addition to defendant city of La Grande.
It is therein further alleged that North Fourth Street, Jackson Avenue and the W Street [Avenue] are streets within said city and form a junction on the east side of said block 10; that said North Fourth Street extends along the east side of said block 10; that said W Avenue extends along the south side thereof, jogs north *389 on the east side of said block on Fourth Street for a short distance and then extends easterly from the east side of said North Fourth Street and that said Jackson Avenue extends in a southeasterly direction from said junction of said streets. The dedication and improvement by the defendant of said streets and the public use thereof as streets and highways for travel are also alleged.
To assure accuracy, we quote paragraphs V, VI, VII, VIII, IX and a portion of paragraph X of plaintiff's second amended complaint:
(1) Defendant unlawfully and negligently permitted said carnival and said swing to be erected on said Block 10 and in said streets while said swing was dangerous and out of repair, and negligently failed to make said Block 10 and said streets safe for plaintiff.
(2) Defendant negligently permitted said swing to be erected and operated at said place in a dangerous, unsafe and defective condition, and while the seats thereof were slick and smooth and tipped in a manner *392 that would cause or permit plaintiff to slide out while riding, as hereinafter alleged.
(3) Defendant negligently permitted said swing to be erected and operated at said place without any foot rests or foot supports attached to the seats of said swing.
(4) Defendant negligently permitted said swing to be erected and operated at said place without sufficient safety chains to hold plaintiff in the seat while riding as hereinafter alleged.
(5) Defendant negligently failed to inspect said swing and failed to make said swing safe for the public and especially for this plaintiff.
(6) Defendant negligently failed to prohibit the operation of said swing at a dangerous and excessive rate of speed, and negligently permitted said swing to be operated at a dangerous and excessive rate of speed and at a speed that caused the seat of said swing in which plaintiff was riding as hereinafter alleged to swing out at an angle of more than 45 degrees and to be a great distance, to-wit, about 15 feet, above the ground.
(7) Defendant negligently failed to see that a safety chain was fastened in front of plaintiff to hold her in the seat of said swing while riding as hereinafter alleged.
(8) Defendant negligently failed to see that the trucks parked around said swing were placed at a sufficient distance away from said swing to be safe, and negligently permitted a truck to be parked sufficiently near to said swing that an occupant falling out of said swing would likely strike the same, and plaintiff did strike the same, as hereinafter alleged.
(9) Defendant negligently permitted a dangerous apparatus which was likely to cause the injury to this plaintiff, to-wit, said swing, to be erected and operated on said Block 10 and said streets at a place where the public and this plaintiff were entitled to go. *393
From the foregoing, it will be seen that the question presented is, whether liability for such damages as plaintiff sustained attached to defendant city when it permitted the carnival company to conduct and operate its carnival on said block and street either by reason of its ownership and control of property abutting upon the street in question, or by reason of its duty to maintain said street in such a condition as to render it safe for travel.
The use of block 10 by the carnival company is relevant only upon the question whether the defendant city, by allowing such use, permitted a nuisance upon its street from which plaintiff sustained damages differing from those suffered by the general public for which the city became liable.
The controlling question, therefore, is whether the defendant city is liable to one, who suffers injury while not using the street for street purposes, by reason of its failure to maintain the street in question in such a condition as to render it safe for travel.
The authorities are not harmonious upon the question here involved and heretofore the question has not been decided by this court. *394
The general rule is that one injured by a defect in a highway, while he is lawfully there and using it as a traveler or pedestrian thereupon, may recover damages from the municipality whose duty it was to prevent the existence of such a defect. The dissidence arises as to whether or not such liability is confined to travelers.
We think that the weight of authority and the better reasoning support the rule restricting liability to travelers only. This, of course, embraces those whose presence on the street is for such purpose even though at the time of their injury they may not have been actually moving or traveling.Bogart v. New York,
The case of Lawrence v. Scranton City, cited by plaintiff to the point that municipalities are liable for the existence of nuisances, is a case where plaintiff's son and his companions had been coasting on the street on Christmas eve. When the son struck a match to light a cigarette an explosion of gas from a leaky main occurred fatally injuring the boy. Clearly the boy was upon the street as a traveler or pedestrian using it for the purposes for which it was dedicated. Lawrence v. Scranton City,
Augusta v. Reynolds, similarly cited, holds that the solicitor general may maintain a suit to restrain by injunction the erection of a public nuisance consisting of a street fair or carnival. Augusta v. Reynolds,
To the point that one having control of property is responsible for exhibitions of concessionaires, plaintiff cities Johnstonev. Panama-Pacific International Exposition Co.,
Thornton v. Maine State Agricultural Society,
The case of Stickel v. Riverview Sharpshooters' Park Company,
In Eldred v. United Amusement Co.,
To the point that the invitation of a concessionaire operating a show in the street is the invitation of the city, plaintiff cites Ramirez v. Cheyenne,
The foregoing review of many of the cases cited by plaintiff is not determinative of the controlling question here, which is whether liability for damage by reason of a nuisance upon a public highway is restricted to those cases where the one injured is using the highway for the purpose for which such highway was established and dedicated.
There are two cases cited by plaintiff which may be said to sustain her contention, although both of them, in our opinion, could have been decided as they were without enlarging the liability of the municipality to embrace all cases of injury whether sustained by a traveler or not.
Malchow v. Leoti,
It will be noted that plaintiff was not a patron of the swing but a pedestrian traveling upon the partially obstructed street. We quote from the opinion:
"So there was a nuisance permitted in the street as a matter of profit in part to a local enterprise, and by thus consenting to its location the city was by act, if not by word, extending an invitation to everybody to patronize the attraction. Having thus diverted the street from its lawful use to the unlawful one of exploiting an enterprise more or less dangerous, the motive power being furnished by a steam engine connected by a cable with the swing, the city is not in a position to draw too fine a line on the conduct of the plaintiff, because he stopped for a brief time where he with others had been thus attracted. He had the right to pass over such parts of the street as he could reach by avoiding the obstructions, and was not required to forego the use of the intersection or so much of it as he could walk over." *399
From this it is apparent that the question of the liability of the city to an injured patron as distinguished from a traveler or pedestrian using the street for street purposes was not before the Kansas court in this case. It is shown in VanCleef v.Chicago,
We construe the opinion, however, in the VanCleef case as supporting plaintiff's position in the case at bar; but, as stated, in the light of the other authorities, we do not deem it to be controlling.
Wheeler v. Fort Dodge,
Briegel v. Philadelphia, 135 Pa. St. 451, 19 A. 1038, 20 Am. St. Rep. 885, deals with the question of a city's liability for damages to adjoining property by reason of a defectively constructed privy well.
We have thus reviewed all of the authorities cited by plaintiff and, notwithstanding the high regard we have for the courts thus cited, we are unable to agree with plaintiff that error was committed by the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff's second amended complaint.
"Volenti non fit injuria", no legal wrong is done to him who consents. Certainly the consent of plaintiff was plainly shown by patronizing the concession and riding as a patron on the swing.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
RAND, C.J., and BELT and LUSK, JJ., concur. *401