Zellers v. City of Bellingham

Fullerton, J.

(dissenting) — As stated in the majority opinion, the city of Bellingham, at the time the respondent received the injury for which she sues, was engaged through a contractor in improving one of its principal streets. One side of the street, the east half, had been theretofore improved by the city, had been open to public travel, and was then *608in actual use by the public; many persons passing over it each day. The contractor, in the course of the work, and for the purpose of moving a pile driver, stretched a cable across the traveled way, fastening it to a telephone pole on the opposite side of the street in such a manner that, when no strain was put upon the cable, it would lie flat upon the surface of the street, but when a strain was put thereon, would raise up from such surface for a distance of some twenty inches. While the cable was in place, the respondent, who was subsequently injured thereon, passed over the street, and coming to the cable found it lying on the surface of the street. She started to cross over it, and while she was in the act of stepping over it, a strain was put thereon causing it to raise. In raising, the cable tripped her, throwing her down upon the street and caused her severe injuries. On this state of facts, the majority hold that the injured person cannot recover unless she is able to show that the city, or some agent of the city, knew, or by the exercise of ordinary diligence should have known, that she was in the act of stepping over the cable at the time it was raised; “Because,” it is said, “if the city did not know, or by reasonable diligence was not required to know, that the plaintiff, Mrs. Zellers, was about to step over the cable at the time it started, there was clearly no negligence on the part of the city.” With all due respect to my associates who concur in this conclusion, I think it without foundation in either reason or authority.

It is a fundamental rule, to substantiate which it would be a work of supererogation to cite authorities, that a city, when it opens a street for public use, must keep it in a reasonably safe condition for travel. It may lawfully, of course, improve a street without closing it entirely to public travel, and may lawfully, in the course of the work, place obstructions or dig trenches therein, provided it leaves the part of the way left open for travel reasonably safe for travel, and uses reasonable care and diligence to protect the public from injury by the defects. It is a general rule, and the rule in this *609jurisdiction, although perhaps not a universal rule, that the city cannot relieve itself of its primary duty in this regard by letting the work of improving a street to a contractor. This we held in Drake v. Seattle, 30 Wash. 81, 70 Pac. 231, 94 Am. St. 844; in McClammy v. Spokane, 36 Wash. 339, 78 Pac. 912; in Peterson v. Seattle, 40 Wash. 33, 82 Pac. 140, and in Lasityr v. Olympia, 61 Wash. 651, 112 Pac. 752.

It is a general rule, also, that there is a difference in respect to the notice necessary to create liability whether the defect is the result of positive misfeasance on the part of the city, or is the result of mere neglect or nonfeasance on its part — that is to say, whether the defect causing the injury was the immediate act of the city or its agent, or whether the defect arose from natural causes, as by wear from use; as, in the one case, the city is bound to take notice of the obstruction from the fact of its creation and is directly chargeable with any injury caused thereby; while, in the other, it must be shown to have had actual notice, or it must be shown that the defect existed for such a length of time as to imply notice, before it is so chargeable. See, in addition to the cases before cited, the cases of Beall v. Seattle, 28 Wash. 593, 69 Pac. 12, 92 Am. St. 892, 61 L. R. A. 583; Sutton v. Snohomish, 11 Wash. 24, 39 Pac. 273, 48 Am. St. 847; and Hayes v. Seattle, 43 Wash. 500, 86 Pac. 852, 117 Am. St. 1062, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 424.

Concerning the facts pertinent to the inquiry, the court knows judicially that the city of Bellingham is a city of the first class; that it had a population, as shown by the United States census of 1910, of 24,577, and an estimated population, made by the same authority in the year of the accident, of 29,937. It knows from the record that the street on which the accident happened was one of the principal streets of the city; that it was left open for travel and was “traveled by hundreds of people daily;” that no guard of any kind was placed around or near the cable; that the obstruction was of such a character when not in use as to allay *610suspicion or fear, and when put in use likely to become highly dangerous. The injured respondent, therefore, was not a trespasser on the street, but, on the contrary, was lawfully thereon. She had the right to assume, and to act on the assumption, that she could pass with reasonable safety over any part of the street left open for travel; and had the right to assume, and to act on the assumption, that the city would not on a sudden, and without warning, change any part of the street from a safe to a dangerous condition.

In the light of these legal principles, and in the light of the conceded facts, I am wholly unable to understand on what theory it can be held that the city was not in this instance guilty of negligence. It seems to me that the city, instead of being free from negligence if it operated the cable without notice, actual or implied, that some person was about to cross over it, was guilty of the grossest negligence if it operated it without first ascertaining that no person was about to or was in the act of crossing over it. It being the primary duty of the city, when it places a dangerous obstruction in a street which it leaves open for travel, to guard and protect the public from injury by such obstruction, the rule, as I understand it, is that it is liable to any one injured from the mere neglect of that duty, unless, of course, it can show that the injured person was himself guilty of negligence contributing to the injury. To hold with the majority in the present case is to hold that the city owed no duty to the respondent other than to refrain from wantonly injuring her. But this is the rule with relation to trespassers only, to persons wrongfully at the place of injury, and has no application to the person rightfully at the place of injury. A person rightfully at the place of injury, and pursuing his way with ordinary care, can recover for an injury caused by a defect in the street by showing mere negligence on the part of the city, he does not have to show a wanton injury. The rule of the majority places the burden on the wrong party. Instead of its being the respondent’s duty to notify the city *611that she was about to cross the cable to cast liability upon the city, it was the city’s duty, in order to free itself from liability, to notify her before she attempted to cross that it was about to use the cable in such a manner as to change it from a safe to a dangerous condition. The instruction given by the court, therefore, states the true 'rule, not the instruction the majority say should have been given.

The case relied upon by the majority to sustain their contention is Pearson v. Willapa Construction Co., 72 Wash. 487, 130 Pac. 903. It is said that the case is very similar in its facts to the present case, but, with due respect to my associates, I think the only similarity is that the plaintiff was in each instance injured by a cable. The cases differ fundamentally. The case cited was rested on the principle that the injured person was a trespasser; that he was traveling where he had no right to travel; and that the operator of the cable owed him no duty to keep the way in a reasonably safe condition for travel, or any duty other than not to wantonly injure him. In the case at bar, the respondent was not a trespasser; she was traveling on a public street where she had a right to be traveling; the city owed her the duty of keeping the street in a reasonably safe condition for travel, and, in consequence, is liable if it neglected that duty to her injury, whether the negligence amounted to wantonness or not. I dissented from the case cited, but not upon the questions of law on which it was rested. It was my opinion that the evidence in the case justified submitting to the jury the question whether the way over which the injured person pursued was of such public use as to make it a quasi public way; contending for the rule of law that, if it was a way in common use by the public, the contractors could not place and leave unprotected dangerous agencies across it without rendering themselves liable to answer for injuries caused thereby. I did not then, and do not now, understand that the majority disagreed with me on the principles of law *612involved, but that the differences arose from the discordant views taken as to the effect of the evidence.

Of the cases decided by this court which I think contrary to the conclusion reached by the majority, I will notice but a few, and first, the case the maj ority attempt to distinguish, namely, Lautenschlager v. Seattle, 77 Wash. 12, 137 Pac. 323. In that case, the appellant was injured by a defect in the street which was in the process of improvement. Stating the general rules governing in such cases, this language was used:

“Where the public use a street upon the invitation of the city, either express or clearly implied, the duty devolves upon the city to use reasonable care to keep it in a reasonably safe condition for travel. Taake v. Seattle, 16 Wash. 90, 47 Pac. 220; Cady v. Seattle, 42 Wash. 402, 85 Pac. 19. A traveler is not required to avoid a particular street because there is another and safer one that he may take. He has a right to travel upon any street which the city leaves open for travel. Cady v. Seattle, supra. Where a city undertakes to improve a street, it is required to use reasonable precautions to guard the public from injury, and in doing so may, if necessary, temporarily close the street to public travel. Peterson v. Seattle, 40 Wash. 33, 82 Pac. 140. It was incumbent upon the city to provide signals or warnings if the walk was in common use and dangerous, and it knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care ought to have known, its condition. Sutton v. Snohomish, 11 Wash. 24, 39 Pac. 273, 48 Am. St. 847.”

Notwithstanding the statement of the majority that the case cited is an entirely different case from the case at bar, I can conceive no reason why the principle announced is not applicable. In the one case, the defect consisted in faulty construction; in the other, a cable stretched across the street. Surely, if it was necessary to put up guards and give warnings to protect from liability in the one case, it was equally so in the other.

In Hayes v. Seattle, 43 Wash. 500, 86 Pac. 852, 117 Am. St. 1062, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 424, the plaintiff was injured *613by falling through an open trap door constructed in a sidewalk on one of the principal streets of the city. The doors were double and opened upwards, and when opened of themselves formed barriers. At the time of the accident, but one of the doors was open, and the plaintiff approached from the opposite way. It was held that the city was liable for the injury on the principle that the opening was on a prominent thoroughfare, in constant use by pedestrians, and that the city knew or ought to have known that to open the doors at any time was dangerous, and, knowing this, was guilty of negligence in not providing for proper guards when they were permitted to be opened. In Lasityr v. Olympia, before cited, the plaintiff was injured by falling over a wire netting stretched across a sidewalk to protect a place therein which was being repaired by the owner of the abutting property with the permission of the city. The city was held liable on similar principles. Manifestly the principle of these cases is contrary to the principle announced in the case at bar; for, if the liability 'of the city depends on its knowledge of the position of the person injured at the time of the immediate happening of the injury, there could have been no recovery in either of them.

But I need not pursue the authorities. They are all one way, and all against the rule announced by the majority.

Judge Mount, writing for the majority, uses this further language, namely:

“The plaintiffs themselves, by their own testimony, knew that the cable was across the street; they knew it was being used for the purpose of moving the pile driver; and they knew that, when the engine was in motion, the cable would be raised above the surface of the street, because they had watched its operation, and a very short time before they attempted to cross, saw its position. It is true that other people, especially pedestrians, were using the street at the time, and that the street was not closed to traffic. But the mere fact that a cable lay across the street and was being used at that particular time was itself a warning of danger, *614and persons attempting to cross it were assuming the risk, unless those operating the cable knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known, that persons were upon the cable, or about to step over it, or were in a dangerous place at the time it was about to be raised or put into operation.”

But this, as I understand the rule, goes only to the contributory negligence of the respondent. It is true, of course, that, if the respondent was herself guilty of negligence, she cannot recover, even though the city were negligent; and if it is meant to be said that there was such contributory negligence as a matter of law to prevent recovery, then the case should be returned with instructions to dismiss and not for a retrial. Clearly, to say that she was guilty of contributory negligence, does not argue in favor of the principle upon which the case is reversed.

In my opinion, the city was negligent in stretching the cable across the street and operating it in a manner dangerous to the traveling public without warning, and is exempted from liability to those only of the traveling public injured thereby to whom warning was unnecessary. As I agree with the majority that the respondent cannot be charged with contributory negligence as a matter of law, I conclude that the case should be affirmed rather than reversed.