20 Mo. App. 489 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
This is an action to recover damages against the defendant, a municipal corporation, for injuries sustained by the plaintiff on account of a defective sidewalk. The evidence, in so far as it is pertinent to the questions to be determined, showed that the plaintiff, a girl aged eleven years, was passing along one of defendant’s sidewalks, on a frequented street and pass-way, and at a point where there were two or more planks loose, she was met, or overtaken, by a gentleman, walking quite fast, who stepped on the end of one of the loose planks, in passing plaintiff, whereby it flew up, and threw her violently to the sidewalk, by reason of which she was grievously injured, and permanently crippled, as the evidence tended to show. This defect in the sidewalk had existed for a month or more previous to this injury. The plaintiff recovered judgment for $1,600, and the defendant has appealed.
I. The matter of error most pressed upon our attention by appellant is the following instruction given by the court on behalf of plaintiff:
“2. In order for plaintiff to recover in this case it is not at all necessary that she should show that defendant, or its agents or officers had actual knowledge or notice of the defect in, or dangerous condition of said sidewalk, if it was defective or dangerous; but if said sidewalk, at said point where plaintiff alleges she received her injuries, had been out of repair, and in an unsafe or dangerous condition for a long space of time prior to plaintiff’s so receiving the injuries complained .of, then the law presumes the defendant had knowledge and knew thereof.”
The criticism is, that it asserts the law will presume notice to thedefendant of the existence of the defect in the sidewalk, from the fact of its having been long out of repair,
There is no question of the rule'of law, that in order to fix upon the defendant a liability for such injury, it must have had actual notice of the defect, with reasonable time thereafter to make the needed repair, or the defect must have been of such an obvious or notorious character, or have existed for such a length of time, that the law will raise the presumption that defendant either knew of it, or might have known of it, by the exercise of that care and diligence due from its servants to the public in supervising and inspecting its streets and sidewalks. It is well settled that if such defect be obvious and notorious, the law will, after a reasonable lapse of time, presume that the municipal authorities knew of it. Lindholm v. St. Paul, 19 Minn. 245 ; 2 Thomp. on Neg. 763, and cases cited. This same author asserts, on same page, that: “notice will be inferred if the defect in the street or sidewalk had existed for a considerable length of time.” And the text seems to be supported by the folio wing adjudications : City of Rockford v. Hilderbrand, 61 Ill. 155; City of Galesburg v. Higby, Id. 287; City of Springfield n. Doyle, 76 Ill. 202 ; Harriman v. Boston, 114 Mass. 245; Bill v. City of Norwich, 39 Conn. 225. In Dewy r. City of Detroit (15 Mich. 307), the court held that in a city of the magnitude of Detroit the defect in the street should be so open and notorious, or of so long standing as to naturally arrest the attention of passers over it. This would seem to recognize a most reasonable distinction as to cities of such vast territory that its officers and servants charged with the care of its highways could not reasonably be expected to have notice of defects in every part of its domain requiring minute inspection to discover them.
Without affirming the correctness, as an abstract proposition of the instruction under review, it should be treated with a regard to the attending circumstances, the facts in evidence, and the other instructions given by the court. The defendant is an. ordinary municipal town.'
In Market v. City of St. Louis (56 Mo. 190), the defect had existed for about two months. The court say: “If a reasonable time had elapsed, as was the case here, where the defect continued for two months, no express notice is necessary.” A defect of three weeks’ standing was held sufficient notice in Sullivan v. City of Oshkosh (13 N. W. R. 468). As to the criticism made on the term, “ a long space of time,” contained in the instruction, it is a sufficient answer to say that the defendant asked, and the court gave on its behalf, the following instruction :
‘ ‘ 3. Although the jury may believe from the evidence that there were two or more loose planks in the sidewalk in question, and that plaintiff was injured by reason of such defect, still, the defendant is not liable in this case, unless the jury believe from the evidence that the planks had been loose for some length of time, and that this defect was of such an obviously dangerous character that*495 the city authorities had reasonable time and opportunity to have known of the defect and repaired it.”
It employs the words “for some length of time,” a much less favorable term for it than that employed by plaintiff. So that, if there was error in this respect, the defendant has adopted it, and it cannot be'heard to complain of it here. Noble v. Blount (77 Mo. 241), in which is quoted the language of Napton, J. In Davis v. Brown (67 Mo. 313): “ Considering all the instructions together, we do not see how the jury could have been misled, and the verdict seems to show that they were not. It hardly lies in the mouth of the defendants to object, here, to a technical blunder, * * * which they waived on the trial by adopting the error.”
Among other instructions given for the defendant is the following:
“5. The jury are instructed that the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff, and before the jury can find for her she must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, to the satisfaction of the jury, each of the following facts: (1) That she was injured by reason of a .defect in the sidewalk in proof. (2) That the city authorities of the town of Trenton had actual notice of the •defect, or that the defect complained of had existed for such a length of time that said city authorities could, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, have known of such ■defect, and had reasonable time to repair the same; and if she has not so satisfied the jury, by a preponderance ■of the evidence, they will find for the defendant.”
With all this before the jury, and in view of the uncontradicted evidence, it is not apparent to us hov. the jury could have been misled to defendant’s hurt by the instruction complained of. In this respect it is clearly distinguishable from the just criticism made by the court on the instruction in Staples v. Town of Canton (69 Mo. 692).
We think the rule laid down in Rice v. City of Des Moines (40 Ia. 641), quite applicable to this case: “ It is •usually not practicable in any one instruction to .present
II. The defendant, in various forms, asked instructions, to the effect, that if the injury to plaintiff resulted directly from the negligence of the man who stepped upon the end of the plank which inflicted the injury, and that the injury would not have occurred but for his act, the plaintiff could not recover. These declarations were refused by the court, and this is assigned for error.
. The objection is not well taken. In the first place, no such issue is affirmatively tendered by the answer. If it be conceded, however, that such fact might be shown under the general issue, it is very questionable whether by the special plea alleging that the injury resulted from plaintiff’s own contributory negligence the defendant was not precluded from asserting at the trial that the negligence of some third party had directly produced it. The two propositions seem hardly consistent. Currier v. Lowe, 32 Mo. 203. And if the position were admissible, there was no proof to sustain it. There was no' evidence that the man who passed the plaintiff had any knowledge of the defect in the sidewalk at that point, so as to make any predicate for negligence on his part in rapidly passing over it. It will, I presume, hardly be contended by the learned counsel that the sidewalks of a street, if kept in any tolerable condition, should not permit the citizen to walk or run over them without being subject to the imputation of carelessness. The law is settled against this contention in Bassett v. City of St. Joseph (53 Mo. 300, 301).
While the intervening negligence of a third party may break the causal connection between defendant’s negligence and the injury to plaintiff, “where, however,
III. This case seems to have been fairly tried, and, under the evidence, we do not see how any other result could have been reached by a competent jury.
the judgment is affirmed.