The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide event.
The action is to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from defendant’s negligence.
The plaintiff received her injuries in a fall upon a sidewalk. Her daughter, who was. walking with her at the time, stepped on a loose planlc in the sidewalk; it tipped up, caught plaintiff’s foot and she fell. The boards lay crossways of the walk. Plaintiff was sixty-one years old. The jury rendered a verdict for $1,480 damages.
The defendant was a village when the accident occurred, November 12, 1902, and when the action was brought February 19, 1903. It was incorporated as a city March '9, 1903, by chapter 22 of the laws of that year, which, with the exception of the electoral provisions, took effect on March 23,1903, at noon.. (See tit. 27, § 16.) TlTe rights of the parties are to be determined under the provisions of the Village Law in force prior to the incorporation as the city.
One reason given here for the reversal of the judgment is that there was a substantial failure to comply with section 322 of the
Another reason for reversal urged-is that.the verdict so far'as it charged the defendant with negligence in failing to discover the walk was defective and repairing it was contrary to the evidence. That the board oyer which the plaintiff fell' was loose at the time of the accidenkmay be regarded as sufficiently established by proof of the accident itself given by the plaintiff and her daughter, but how long, if at all, it had .been loose prior to that time was not satis-' factorily shown. The. plaintiff spoke of the walk only as she saw it after she fell, and she finally admitted that all she knew about the condition was what her daughter told her. It was dark at the time. The daughter testified the plank was loose and the stringers rotten.' She did not look at the place after that for three weeks or so, and she. did not see the stringers then because the board had been replaced.' She did not observe any loose plank before the accident. The son gave evidence as to the condition of the wralk. He neyer saw any plank out until after his mother fell, and he said he made no particular examination of the walk before the accident, but noticed the planks were loose and walk would settle as he walked over it.' Seven' witnesses were sworn for the defendant as to the condition of the walk. Without reciting the same or any of; it, if may be said, generally, that it showed no such defective con
We think the evidence taken altogether failed to establish actionable negligence on the part of the defendant, and that the jury should not have liejd the defendant liable.
All concurred ■; Kruse, J., upon second ground stated in the opinion only-
judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event upon questions of law and fact.
