11 R.I. 447 | R.I. | 1877

The first count in the declaration alleges that the city of Providence "wrongfully neglected and refused to keep, and to keep in repair, a certain public highway in said city, commonly called and known as `Washington Street,' so that the same was safe and convenient for travellers, their teams, carts, carriages, and on foot, as by law it was bound to do; but, on the contrary, suffered and permitted said highway to be and remain out of repair, and unsafe and inconvenient, *451 for travellers, with their teams and carriages, and for foot-passengers: to wit, said city made, and suffered to be made, deep cuts and excavations in, and along, said highway, and threw, and suffered to be thrown, upon said highway, and the sidewalks to said highway, and in front of the place of business of the plaintiffs, large quantities of dirt, stone, and gravel, and suffered and permitted the same to be and remain in said highway, and upon the sidewalks, for a long space of time, to wit, from October 1, 1872, to May 12, 1873, by means whereof the said plaintiffs, while travelling on and using the said highway, and while carrying on their usual and ordinary business, viz., that of keeping a grocery store, were greatly injured and damnified thereby, and thereby lost their usual trade, and the profit that would otherwise have accrued unto them, by carrying on their business, as aforesaid, and were also thereby put to great trouble and expense in moving merchandise, and in delivering goods, and were also put to great trouble and expense in extra labor," c. The second and only other count is similar to the first.

The testimony produced at the trial in support of the declaration showed that, in 1872-1873, the plaintiffs kept a grocery on Washington Street, and that in October, 1872, the street was excavated for a sewer, and the dirt thrown from the excavation upon the sides of the street, and over the sidewalk in front of the plaintiffs' store, and for considerable distances above and below their store, thus rendering the street impassable for teams, and inconvenient for pedestrians, and putting the plaintiffs to additional trouble and expense in receiving and delivering goods, and deterring, for a while, a portion of their habitual customers from resorting to the store for trade. The plaintiffs also submitted testimony to show that, after the street was put in this condition, it was suffered to remain so for two or three weeks, while little or nothing was doing towards the construction of the sewer; that then the work was resumed, and went on for about fifty days before it was completed, but that the dirt and stones were not entirely cleaned away until some time in April, 1873. They claim indemnity for their loss of trade, and for the increase of expense and trouble, incurred by them during the unnecessary prolongation of the work. For the city, testimony was introduced to show that the sewer, though constructed under the *452 authority given to the city, was not constructed by, but for the city, under contract with it, and that the constructors, not the city, had control of the men employed on the work, the city having power only to supervise the work, and to take it from the contractor and complete it itself, in case the contractor should fail to fulfil the terms of the contract, first giving the contractor three days' notice in writing of its intention to do so. Testimony was also introduced to show that the city took pains to ascertain that the contractor was a proper person to contract with for the work, and that, after it learned that the work was not progressing with reasonable dispatch, it gave the contractor the three days' notice, stipulated for in the contract, and thereupon put the sewer into the hands of another contractor, who pushed it forward to completion with proper expedition.

It was contended, on the part of the city, that if the city had used reasonable care and diligence in making the contract, and in taking the work out of the hands of the contractor when he failed to perform it with due dispatch, the city was not liable to the plaintiffs in this action for any delay or negligence on the part of the contractor or his employees. It was also contended that the injury sustained by the plaintiffs was an injury which they sustained in common with the rest of the public, and was not so special and peculiar in its character that it would entitle them to maintain their action against the city. These points were presented in various requests for instruction, which, however, we do not deem it necessary more particularly to recite. The court instructed the jury that if the work was done with reasonable care and diligence, taking no more time than was necessary, the plaintiffs, though seriously injured, could not recover at all; but that, if there was unreasonable delay in doing the work, and, during this delay, access to the plaintiffs' store was cut off or obstructed, in the manner described, it was an injury to the plaintiffs for which the plaintiffs would be entitled to recover: recovering damages, however, only for the prolongation of the obstruction beyond what was reasonably necessary. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs for two hundred dollars. The case is now before us, upon the defendant's petition for a new trial, for alleged errors in the instructions to the jury.

Two questions are raised by the petition: First, was the injury *453 resulting to the plaintiffs from the obstruction so special and peculiar that an action on the case will lie in their favor for the damage? Second, if so, will the action lie against the city of Providence, notwithstanding the contract under which the work creating the obstruction was done?

1. We do not think the injury was one which the plaintiffs suffered in common with the rest of the public. It was peculiar to themselves. The public generally suffered no such loss of trade, and was put to no such trouble and expense in receiving and delivering goods, as the plaintiffs suffered and incurred in consequence of the obstruction in front of their place of business. Wilkes v. Hungerford Market Co. 2 Bing. N.C. 281, is a leading case upon this subject. There the plaintiff, a bookseller, having his shop on a public thoroughfare, suffered a loss of trade or custom, in consequence of an unauthorized obstruction across it. The court decided that the injury was peculiar to the plaintiff, and that he was therefore entitled to recover. See also Stetson v. Faxon, 19 Pick. 147, where the cases upon this point, occurring previous to 1837, are fully collected and reviewed. Blanc v. Klumpke, 29 Cal. 156. The obstruction here was not remote, but abutted directly on the estate of the plaintiffs. Willard v. City of Cambridge, 3 Allen, 574.

There is a matter connected with this point which was not discussed at the bar, but which deserves a passing remark. In Maine, Reed v. Inhabitants of Belfast, 20 Me. 246; Sandfordet ux. v. Inhabitants of Augusta, 32 Me. 536; Weeks v.Inhabitants of Shirley, 33 Me. 271: in New Hampshire, Ball v.Town of Winchester, 32 N.H. 435; Griffin v. Sanbornton, 44 N.H. 246: in Massachusetts, Smith v. Inhabitants of Dedham, 8 Cush. 522; Holman v. Inhabitants of Townsend, 13 Met. 297;Brailey et al. v. Inhabitants of Southborough, 6 Cush. 141;Harwood v. City of Lowell, 4 Cush. 310: and in Connecticut,Chidsey v. Town of Canton, 17 Conn. 475, it has been held that towns, under their statutes, are liable only for injuries to person and property suffered by persons using the highway, and not for damages sustained in consequence of not being able to use it, nor in consequence of not being able to use it without additional trouble and expense.

Some of the cases cited were decided in view of the specific *454 terms used in the statutes, and some of them in view of the fact that language, originally specific, had been generalized in revision for the sake of brevity merely, as was supposed, and not to extend its meaning. Harwood v. City of Lowell, 4 Cush. 310. Our statute makes the towns "liable to all persons who may in any wise suffer injury to their persons or property by reason of any such neglect." The provision appears first in the Digest of 1844. It has always remained the same. Its meaning cannot be narrowed by tracing it to an earlier form. It is certainly broad enough, giving proper effect to the words "in any wise," to cover a consequential injury to property, and therefore broad enough, we think, to cover the injury complained of by the plaintiffs.

2. A statute of the state makes it the duty of the several towns and cities of the state to keep their respective highways "safe and convenient" for travellers with their teams, carts, and carriages, at all seasons of the year, and provides that any town or city which shall neglect this duty "shall be liable to all persons who may in any wise suffer injury to their persons or property by reason of any such neglect." The duty being imposed by statute cannot be qualified by anything of less authority. A town or city which is subject to the duty cannot qualify it by contract or otherwise. But by statute it can be qualified, and qualified, too, either expressly or by implication. A statute confers upon the city of Providence the power to make sewers in the streets of the city. This power cannot be exercised without a remission of the duty, and, therefore, by implication, the duty is suspended, while a sewer is making, for so long a time as is reasonably necessary to do the work. But beyond that the implication does not go, and, therefore, if more time is taken, it is taken in violation of the statutory duty, and any person who is specially injured thereby, either in his person or his property, is entitled to indemnity under the statute. This would hardly be disputed if the city had made the sewer for itself. The contention is that the city did not incur liability, because, instead of making the sewer for itself, it let it out to be made by a contractor. In support of this many cases have been cited. The cases cited are, however, distinguishable from the case at bar. They were decided on the principle that, when a person has work done *455 for him under contract, without reserving to himself any direct control of the contractor or his men, there is no relation of principal and agent, or of master and servant, between him and them, and, consequently, no such liability for their torts and negligences as is incident to that relation. The cases would have value as precedents, if, for instance, the city were sued for some tort or negligence of the contractor or his men, not, amounting to a public nuisance. The city, if so sued, could not, according to those cases, be held, if it had parted, and could lawfully part, with the control of the work. That, however, is not this case. Here the city is sued for neglecting its statutory duty. It says in excuse that the duty was suspended for the time being by the making of a sewer in the street, under an authority conferred on the city by statute. The answer is, that the work on the sewer was unreasonably prolonged. The city replies that it is not to blame for that, because the making of the sewer was committed to a contractor. Then comes the question whether the city can, by making a contract for its own benefit, relax the obligation of a duty imposed upon it by statute, for the benefit of the public. We think it cannot. The city has both the duty to perform and the power to exercise, and, if it exercises the power, it is bound to exercise it so as not unnecessarily to circumscribe or suspend the duty. It may make the sewer itself, or it may commit the making to contractors; but if it elects to commit the making to contractors, it must still see to it that the streets are not unnecessarily obstructed; for, in whichever way the work is done, the duty to keep the streets safe and convenient is the same. Storrs v. City of Utica, 17 N.Y. 104;City of Cincinnati v. Stone et al. 5 Ohio St. 38; Brooks etux. v. Inhabitants of Somerville, 106 Mass. 271, 276;Inhabitants of Lowell v. Boston Lowell R.R. Corp. 23 Pick. 24, cited and commented on in Hilliard v. Richardson, 3 Gray, 349, 352, 353; Water Co. v. Ware, 16 Wall. 566, 575; Gray etux. v. Pullen Hubble, 5 B. S. 970; Hole v.Sittingbourne Sheerness R.R. Co. 6 H. N. 488; Lesher v.Wabash Navigation Co. 14 Ill. 85; Chicago, St Paul Fond duLac R.R. Co. v. McCarthy, 20 Ill. 385.

We find it unnecessary, in the view which we have taken, to consider a question which has been somewhat discussed, namely, whether the city did not reserve to itself such a control of the *456 contractor and his men as to make it liable, even as principal or master, for their torts and negligences. We express no opinion upon that question, but, for the reasons already stated, refuse a new trial.

Petition dismissed.

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