after making the foregoing statement., delivered the opinion of the, court.
1. The first contention .of plaintiff in error is that the stone was an unlawful obstruction, per se. • This is deduced as a consequence from section 222 of the Revised Statutes of the District of Columbia, which reads as follows:
“No open space, public reservation, or other public grounds in the city of Washington, nor any portion of the public streets and avenues of said city, shall be occupied by any private person or for any private purpose whatever.”
This section cannot be construed to prohibit putting upon a street any object without regard to its effect on the use of the street. The sweeping character of such a construction need not be pointed out. There are objects which subserve the use of streets and cannot be considered obstructions to them, although some portion of their space may be occupied-This is illustrated by a number of cases.
In
Dubois
v.
City of Kingston,
*156
Robert
v.
Powell,
It was further remarked: “The question involved in this class of cases is, whether an object complained of is usual, reasonable or necessary in the use of the street by the owner of the premises, or any one else.”
City of Cincinnati
v.
Fleisher, Ad’mr.,
It was held in Macomber v. City of Taunton, 100 Massachusetts, 255, that a hitching post was not a defect in the highway for which the city was liable for permitting it to remain.
Plaintiff in error cites City of Scranton v. Callerson, 94 Pa. St. 202, and Davis v. City of Austin, 22 Texas Civ. App. 460.
In the first case, an iron water plug in the middle of a street and projecting above its surface, was held to be a nuisance. Obviously the case is not in point. The second case sustains *157 the contention of plaintiff in error, but cannot be followed, against the authority and reasoning of the other cases.
2. The second contention of plaintiff in error is that it was the duty of the District of Columbia to so- light the street as to show the presence of the stone thereon, the District having full knowledge thereof. This duty is made to rest mainly upon section 233 of the Revised Statutes of the District of Columbia, which is as follows:
“The proper authorities are directed to increase, from time to time as the public good may require, the number of street lamps on any of the streets, lanes, alleys, public ways and grounds in the city of Washington, and to do any and all things pertaining to the well lighting of the city.”
This, in one sense, is but another form of the first contention. The duty of afcity to especially illuminate a place where an object is, or to put a policeman on guard by it to warn pedestrians, depends upon the object being.an unlawful obstruction.
The plaintiff in error can claim nothing from the general duty of the city under the statute to light the streets. The exercise of such duty was necessarily a matter of judgment and discretion, depending upon considerations which this record does not exhibit.
Judgment affirmed.
