42 W. Va. 798 | W. Va. | 1896
O. B. Waggener filed bis declaration against the town of Point Pleasant in the Circuit Court of Mason county. The defendant demurred thereto. The court sustained the demurrer, and the plaintiff', not wishing to amend, dismissed the suit. The declaration contains four long counts, but, as they are virtually and substantially the same, it is not
The ground of demurrer urged by counsel in their argument is that the declaration does not sufficiently allege “that the street or sidewalk upon which the injury occurred was, at the time and place where the injury was sustained, controlled and treated by the town authorities as a public street or sidewalk, and opened as such,” as held in the case of Chapman v. Milton, 31 W. Va. 385 (7 S. E. 22) and approved in Childrey v. City of Huntington, 34 W. Va. 457 (12 S. E. 536); Phillipps v. City of Huntington, 35 W. Va. 406 (14 S. E. 17). The declaration alleges that the place where, at the time when, the accident occurred, “was a common and public sidewalk on the east side of Water street, which is also known as ‘Eront Street,’ between First street and Second street, in the town of Point Pleasant, Mason county, West Yirginia, and within the corporate limits of said town, in said county, and which the defendant kept open and treated as a public sidewalk, over and upon which said sidewalk all the citizens of this state, and all other's, had the right to travel, pass, and repass, without hindrance or obstruction, and it was the duty of said defendant to put and keep said sidewalk in good repair.” This allegation, while prolix, appears to be a compliance with the very letter of the law. The argument is that the
There is a much more serious objection to this declaration than the one urged and relied on. May not every averment of the declaration be admitted to be true, and yet the town not be liable for damages? In other words, does the declaration state a sufficient cause of action against the town? It was early held by this Court that “a municipal corporation is not an insurer against accidents upon the streets aud sidewalks. Nor is every defect therein, though it cause the injury sued for, actionable. It is sufficient if the streets (which include sidewalks and bridges thereon) are in a reasonably safe condition for travel in the ordinary modes, by night as well as by day; and whether they are so or not is a practical question, to be determined in each case by its particular circumstances.” Wilson v. City of Wheeling 19 W. Va. 323, 324. This law was approved in the late case of Yeager v. City of Bluefield, 40 W. Va. 484 (21 S. E. 752); and it was further held that, “While the liability of municipal corporations is in its nature absolute, that does not refer to the cause of action. That must exist before the liability arises.” Judge Brannon, in his opinion, commenting on this subject, says: “But this idea of absoluteness does not refer at all to the cause of liability, but only to the liability when it exists. It does not mean that the state of the street must be perfect. Before imposing this absolute liability, we must first determine whether the street is out of repair, in the sense of the statute. When is it so out of repair? Is it to be absolutely free from stones, mud, or inequalities, like the floor of your own home, or like the paths, walks, and drives in the grounds of
The averments of the present declaration are that the defendant “allowed and permitted said sidewalk to become and remain in bad condition, order, and repair,” “in this: That” it “permitted a great number of the bricks of which said sidewalk was built to be torn up and carried away, and that other of said bricks were in the ground, with their tops projecting upward above the surrounding surface, and there was also a number of loose bricks partially imbedded in the ground, all of which made a very rough, uneven, and dangerous surface on said sidewalk, and allowed said sidewalk to be and remain uneven, sideling, muddy, rocky, and slippery, * * * by means whereof * * * the said plaintiff then, lawfully going, traveling, and passing over said sidewalk first above mentioned, and on the rough, uneven, and dangerous surface aforesaid, caught one of his feet under the points of a projecting brick, whereby,” etc. A sidewalk may be rough, uneven, sideling, muddy, rocky, and slippery, and what might be designated as “very dangerous” in the hilly towns of West Virginia, without imposing any liability on the town. Nay, sometimes the smoother they are, the more dangerous they are
Plaintiff’s counsel say in their brief: “The declara
The judgment is therefore affirmed.