59 S.E. 992 | N.C. | 1907
On issues submitted, and under the charge of the court, the jury rendered a verdict that defendant was guilty of actionable negligence; that plaintiff was at the time in the exercise of proper care, and awarded substantial damages for the injury.
Judgment on the verdict for plaintiff, and defendant excepted and appealed, and assigned for error:
"(4) That the court erred in its refusal to give the first prayer for instructions of defendant, as follows: That a municipal corporation is not bound to light the streets at night; (449) that while its charter may confer the power, this power is of a governmental and discretionary nature, and for the exercise of the same the city would not be liable.
"(5) That the court erred in its refusal to give the fourth prayer for instructions, as follows: That the city is not liable absolutely for defects in its streets and sidewalks, and that the mere existence of such defects, therefore, is not sufficient to constitute a cause of action; that the city is not held to guarantee safety, but is only held to provide a reasonably safe way of travel, and the ground of liability to private parties for injury while passing over the sidewalks or streets is only a liability for negligence or neglect, and the mere existence of an obstruction or defect is not in itself sufficient; but to constitute negligence it must be shown that the authorities of the city had notice of the defect or obstruction and had power to remedy the same and neglected to do so.
"(6) That the court erred in its refusal to give the fifth prayer for instructions, as follows: That if the jury shall find that, from its early days, steps and porches have been allowed upon the sidewalks of the streets, and that they have been used by the property holders from ancient times, the city should not be held liable for failure to compel the removal of the same."
After stating the case: Considering the defendant's assignments of error in reverse order, the position taken, that the projection of the steps upon the sidewalk was sanctioned by the continuous existence of such a condition for twenty-five or more years, cannot be sustained. If this projection of the steps was such an obstruction of the street that it amounted to an actionable wrong, it cannot be rendered lawful by lapse of time, however great. As said in Elliott on (450) Roads and Streets (2 Ed.), p. 706: "No length of time will render a public nuisance, such as the obstruction of a highway, legal, or give the person guilty of maintaining it any right to continue it, to the detriment of the public. Each day's continuance of such a nuisance is an indictable offense." Where an obstruction is a wrong of this character, a city government can neither validate it by grant nor sanction it by acquiescence; and, having the power, in the exercise of its ministerial functions, of summary abatement, the city is responsible to an individual who is injured by its existence, when the injured person is himself in the exercise of due care. S. v. R. R.,
As to the second position, we have held in Fitzgerald v. Concord,
Again, we think that the prayer indicated in defendant's fourth assignment of error is sound, as a general proposition, and is correct *329
as applied to the facts of the case. In the absence of statutory requirement, a city is under no legal obligation to light its streets and such obligation does not arise or exist from the fact that the city has been given the power to light them. And where a city or town has undertaken the duty, the placing and character of the lights must be allowed to rest very largely in the discretion of the authorities. Brown v. Durham,
There is nothing in our present decision which in any way conflicts withFisher v. New Bern,
For the errors indicated, the defendant is entitled to a new trial of the cause, and it is so ordered.
New trial.
Cited: Johnson v. Raleigh,
(453)