Plaintiff brought this action to recover the sum of $10,000 for injuries alleged to have been caused by falling upon an icy sidewalk. She alleged notice of the condition upon the part of the city, and further that said condition had existed for such length of time that the city, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have known of the condition of said walk in time to have remedied the same prior to her injuries. The material portions of her petition are:
“Plaintiff states that on the 15th day of December, A. D. 1904, she had occasion to leave her house at 2906 Pine street to transact some business; that in returning from her business she came from Washington avenue to Ewing avenue, or Twenty-ninth street; that there was snow and ice on the sidewalk on the west side of said Ewing avenue or Twenty-ninth street, between Washington avenue and Locust street; that said snow and ice on the sidewalks on the west side of said Ewing avenue or Twenty-ninth street, was rough and uneven and in ridges and in an unsafe and dangerous condition to pedestrians traveling thereon, and that said snow and ice was in the said dangerous condition to pedestrians traveling thereon for several days prior to the 15th day of December, A. D. 1904. . . . Plaintiff states that on said 15th day of December, A. D. 1904, at or about noon of the same day, she was walking on the west side of the sidewalk on Ewing avenue or Twenty-ninth street between Washington avenue and Locust street, and exercising reasonable care in going to her residence south on Pine street,*41 when she reached a point or place on said sidewalk on the west side of said Ewing avenue or Twenty-ninth street, about one hundred feet north of Locust street, and about twenty feet south of the alley midway between Washington avenue and Locust street, and owing to the rough, rugged and uneven and dangerous surface of the said sidewalk at said point or place, caused by the snow and ice that had prior thereto fallen and had been permitted to accumulate and remain on the' said sidewalk by the defendant corporation’s officers, agents and servants in a rough, rugged, uneven and dangerous condition, she slipped and fell, striking upon her right side with great force on the said sidewalk and thereby and by reason of the said fall, breaking the small bone of her right arm above and between the wrist and elbow and wrenching and spraining the wrist of the right hand.”
The answer of the city was a general denial, and a plea of contributory negligence. Reply general denial.
At the close of the plaintiff’s case the trial court sustained a demurrer to the testimony, whereupon the plaintiff was forced to and did take a nonsuit. This nonsuit, the court upon timely motion made by plaintiff, refused to set aside, and thereupon the cause was by her appealed to this court.
From the evidence it appears that the accident occurred upon Thursday just about noon. The case had been tried nisi prior to this trial, at which time the plaintiff evidently testified that the place where she fell was extremely smooth and slippery. In this testimony she explained that she was mistaken in the use of the’preposition “on” for the preposition “by,” as Germans frequently mix these words. In this trial she says that in the center of the sidewalk was a long smooth slippery place, and that to the side thereof it was rough, and she took the side of the sidewalk, because she thought it safer. She also says that
From her 'evidence it appears that there was a general snow which fell either Sunday night or Monday night; that it was cold the day after the snow; that the snow was four or five inches deep, or more; that the day before the accident it rained so as to melt the snow; that the night before the accident at noon of the next day the snow and ice on the sidewalks froze hard; that the roughness in the snow and ice was occasioned by the footprints of travelers who had gone along before this freeze; that the frozen snow and ice at the place of accident was four or five inches deep.
Two young ladies picked the plaintiff up just after her fall, and the roughness of the snow and ice at the point of the accident is by them described as being occasioned by the footprints of travelers on the walk.
‘ The testimony shows that the accident occurred on Ewing avenue at a point between Washington avenue and Locust street, at about the point named in the petition. The character of plaintiff’s injuries need not be stated further than what the petition charges, as above set out.
Such in substance are the facts of the case.
I. There are at least two good reasons for sustaining the action of the trial court in this cause. In the first place, there are three streets mentioned in the evidence, to-wit, Ewing avenue, Washington avenue and Locust street, as being at or near the locus of the accident. One witness, Fraudenstein, testified:
“I am in the laundry business, 2907 Pine street. I have lived for about thirty-five years. I know the locality of Ewing, between Washington avenue and Locust street. It has asphaltum on the street. I know it to be a street at least twenty-five years.”
II. Under the facts the city was not liable and for several reasons:
(a) The city is not liable because the injury was occasioned by a sudden freeze the night before the injury at noon of the next day. No notice is brought home to the city, and one-half day’s time is not such as would permit the presumption of knowledge by the exercise of ordinary care. By the evidence it appears that whilst there was snow and slush on the sidewalk the day before the accident, yet it was safe for travel, and if unsafe at the time of the accident, it was by reason of the sudden freeze of the night before and not otherwise. Under such circumstances the city is not liable. [Hyer v. City of Janesville, 101 Wis. l. c. 374;
In the Wisconsin case cited, supra, it was said: “If the walk was defective at all at the time of the injury, it was wholly caused hy the sudden freezing of the soft, slushy snow, spread evenly over it except as it was indented hy footprints therein. Reasonable care did not require the walk to he scraped clean, down to the planking, or that mere footprints made in the soft snow and frozen in that condition should be removed. They did not cause any obstruction to or render travel on the walk dangerous, tested by the standard of reasonable safety under the circumstances. The furth-erest the courts have gone on this question is to hold that snow and ice allowed to accumulate on a walk in an uneven and ridgy condition so as to constitute an obstruction to public travel, renders it defective and actionably so.”
In the Harrington ease,supra, the New York Court, through RugeR, Ch. J., said: “The evidence'established the fact that for four days previous to the accident the weather had been warm, causing the snow and ice on the walk to thaw, and become soft, wet and sloppy. On the night previous to the accident the weather suddenly became colder and the snow and slush in the streets froze hard, forming ice and leaving footprints made during the previous sloppy weather plainly visible in the frozen deposit. In some places the owners of property adjoining the walk had cleaned off the snow, but at the place of the accident it had not for some weeks been entirely removed. Much of the snow falling during that time had passed off through the natural effect of the elements upon it, but the portion referred to was what remained of a much larger accumulation. The walk, as thus shown, presented no unusual appearance for cities in our uncertain and inclement climate, and caused no more objectionable
(b) The evidence shows a general condition to have existed in the city. Three or four days prior there
“Snow and ice on sidewalks have been the occasion of many injuries to persons, and the law-books are .full of instances where the duty of a municipality in respect to such conditions has been discussed.
“Running through all the cases to which our attention has been called on this subject, we find the general proposition that ice or snow upon a sidewalk or in a street is not to be classed with dangerous obstructions, such as a city is required to remove. It would be more saccurate to say that it is a dangerous obstruction, but that it is excepted from the category of obstructions for which the city is liable upon the ground of the impracticability of the city’s removing it. There are, for example, in this city many hundreds of miles of sidewalks, upon which snow falls and ice forms when the weather suits, and immediately upon its fall the snow is beaten down by the feet of thousands walking over it. To some extent the sidewalks and streets may be and are cleared of such obstruction, but to remove it entirely or to a degree that would render it not dangerous, is impracticable, and therefore not embraced in the law’s reasonable requirements. There is another reason for making snow or ice, on the sidewalks, and in the streets, an exception to that dangerous condition for which a city is liable, that is, when that condition exists generally, it is obvious and everyone is on his guard. Any pedestrian on the sidewalk or traveller in the street is warned by all his surroundings that ice and snow abound and consequently danger*47 of slipping and falling is to be apprehended at every step. The law is reasonable in this, as in all things.”
All the evidence in this ease shows that the roughness and uneveness at the point of injury was only such as was occasioned by footprints made in the slush and •wet snow of the previous day which had frozen the night before the accident.. There are cases which hold that where ice is permitted to accumulate in high, rough and uneven ridges, and to thus remain, there is municipal liability, but this ease does not even fall within the rule of those cases because of the absent facts.
Upon the facts of the case at bar the trial court should have sustained the demurrer, and its judgment should be and is affirmed.