The petition alleges that, with the consent and by the order and authority of the defendant city, one of its principal streets was on July 4, 1903, obstructed by a wire stretched from the roof of the courthouse bordering upon said street and drawn across the traveled street sto a post or fastening near the ground on the opposite side of said street. It is further alleged that said wire was so stretched and prepared to facilitate the purpose of a female acrobat or performer of dangerous feats to slide down said wire from the courthouse roof to the ground below while “ hanging by her teeth,” which purpose was publicly advertised and well known to the city and its officers, who in violation of their statutory duty to keep the streets free from obstructions to travel, not only neglected and failed to prevent the erection and use of such nuisance, but failed and neglected to cause the same to be removed and permitted the same to remain and be put to its designated use to the manifest peril of all persons lawfully using said public way. It is further alleged that as the plaintiff, having no knowledge or notice of the existence of said nuisance, was passing along said street, as he lawfully might, the acrobat or per
The testimony, without substantial controversy, tends to show that, preparatory to a celebration of the national anniversary, the city council of Et. Dodge by formal resolution granted to an organization known as the “ Commercial Club,” “ the privilege of the streets for a fourth of July celebration, . . . the privilege of selling privileges for booths and entertainments such as they may see fit to permit with the concurrence of the mayor of the city, and the sole right to collect and appropriate all revenues derived therefrom to defray the expenses attendant upon such celebration; that they be granted the privilege of discharging fireworks for an evening display; and that said government appoint such special police as it may deem necessary to preserve order.”
Pursuant to this authority, and in furtherance of the general purposes of the celebration, the Commercial Club procured or permitted one De Etta to come to Et. Dodge with the exhibition referred to in the petition. His coming and the proposed “ slide for life ” by a young woman under his management were advertised as one of the attractions of the day. The wire on which the slide was to be executed was put up early in the morning of the celebration or during the evening prior thereto, stretching from the roof of the courthouse, which stands flush with the public sidewalk, downward and outward in a diagonal course across the street known as Central avenue, and some distance into a cross-street known as Seventh street, ending at a telephone pole to which it was fastened near the ground. That the street was to be thus occupied was a matter of very general
The testimony tends to show that the plaintiff was a laborer. He did not take any of the local papers, and, while he knew that a celebration was in progress, he did not know of the proposed slide for life. With his wife he came along the sidewalk in front of the courthouse, making his way with or through the crowd there gathering. Pausing a while for his wife to rest herself, he stood at the outer edge of the walk to look about him, and in this position was struck
■ That the city may be held liable for permitting condititons which endanger travelers, but do not constitute any defect in the street surface or obstruct travel thereon, has been expressly held by this court. For instance, in Stanley v. Davenport,
It is the duty of the city to keep its streets open and in repair and free from nuisance. It is also its duty to maintain its sidewalks in a reasonably safe condition. This duty extends, not merely to the surface of the street or walk, but to those things within its control which endanger the safety of those using the street or walk properly. It may not be the duty of a city to open to public travel a given street to its full width, and it may not be its duty to construct a sidewalk thereon; but, when it has assumed that obligation, it should make the street and walk reasonably safe for the uses for which they are intended. A defect is defined to be “ a want or absence of something necessary for completeness or perfection.” Webster’s Dictionary. It also includes the idea of a fault or want of perfection. In the statutory sense a street or sidewalk is defective when it is not in a reasonably safe condition for the use for which it is intended. That condition may be due to improper construction, to poor material, or to other causes. It may be due to the presence of something which is a menace to the safety of users of the way, as well as to imperfect construction or. the absence of needed labor or material.
• In the Barries case, supra, the Supreme Court of the United States says: “ The statute gives to municipal corporations the care, supervision, and control of all public
The same principle was recognized and applied in Freeland v. Muscatine,
Not unlike in fact and in principle is the recent case decided by this court (Farrell v. Dubuque,
As bearing upon the propositions thus far discussed, see, in addition to authorities already cited, Grove v. Ft. Wayne,
Directly in point upon this proposition is also Cohen v. Mayor,
For the reasons stated the judgment of the district court is reversed.
