The opinion of the court was delivered, October 26th 1868, by
Read, J.By the Act of 13th June 1836, relating to roads, highways and bridges, county bridges over, any river, creek or rivulet on the line of adjoining counties shall be built and be maintained and kept in repair by the commissioners of such counties at the joint and equal charge of both counties ; and if either county shall necessarily incur more than its due proportion of such charge, it shall be lawful for such county to recover from the other county the excess so incurred, in an action to be founded on this act. By a supplementary Act of 13th April 1843 (Pamph. L. 221), it was made the duty of the county commissioners of the several counties of this Commonwealth to repair all bridges erected by the county, and to pay the expenses of such repairs out of the county treasury in the usual manner, except (amongst others) the county of Armstrong; but by an act, “ relative to roads and bridges in Armstrong county,” of the 5th May 1854, this exception was repealed, and the provisions of said Act of 1843 were extended to the county of Armstrong.
A bridge had been erected by private subscription over Red Bank Creek in 1850, and on the 11th April 1859 the legislature passed 44 an act declaring a bridge between the counties of Armstrong and Clai’ion.as a county bridge.”
It recites that 44 the bridge across Red Bank creek, where the public road crosses said creek at the place known as the Rockport Mill, has been built by individual enterprise, and that the expense of keeping said bridge is too great for the townships adjoining,” and then enacts,/4 that the bridge which is now built across Red Bank creek, between the counties of Armstrong and Clarion, at the place known as the Rockport Mill, be and the same is declared a county bridge, and to be governed by the laws now in force in relation to bridges built on county lines.”
*208The bridge had been built about ten years, and had been a county bridge one year and seven months when it fell. On the 10th November 1860, about three o’clock in the afternoon, whilst the plaintiff and two other men in a wagon, with a grist of ten bushels of buckwheat, were crossing the bridge at a slow walk, it broke down and the whole span went down, the Armstrong end of the bridge going down first. All floated down the creek together, and landed about one and a half miles down, caught on a rock, scattered the bridge, and the horses went out on the Armstrong side.
The defendant got his wound on the falling of the bridge. His frontal bone was fractured, and he was trepanned. He was very ill for several months, and the injury left him deaf of one ear, and when his physician attended him he thought he would never be able to attend to business'.
This action is brought to recover damages for this injury. The natural inquiry was therefore as to the actual condition of the bridge previous to and at the time of the accident. The evidence is principally, if not entirely, confined on this point to the year 1860.
Two of the supervisors examined the bridge in June, and in the large braces found the wood rotten. They ran their knife-blades in the whole length. The timbers were rotten — the ends of all the timbers. Examined the end of the sill and end of the brace, and found them rotten. Roth thought the bridge unsafe, and it was closed up twice in that month by one of them.
Two of the Armstrong and two of the Clarion county commissioners, some time afterwards, examined the bridge, the Armstrong commissioners having been notified that it needed repairs and was unsafe.
They did not make any particular examination of the bridge, and gave a contract to Mr. Putney to fix it; it wtis plain it needed a good many planks, say 1000 feet of plank, and tightening screws and braces. They did not examine the extent of the rottenness nor close up the bridge. Putney was limited to $30 or $40. In looking at the sills they saw they were rotten. The laying on the plank and tightening the screws would not strengthen the sills. .One of the commissioners who examined the bridge said, “ We came to the conclusion that by tightening the nuts and putting on some new plank it would do till the next spring ; we had a number of bridges to build, and were scarce of funds.”
The repairs directed by the commissioners were made, and after it was repaired every person travelled on it, and it was generally used by the public, and Amos McMillan, one of the persons in the plaintiff’s wagon, had crossed the bridge the morning of the accident.
It was the duty of the commissioners to have examined the *209bridge thoroughly, which they did not, and to make a thorough repair so as to render the bridge perfectly safe, or to close it up so as to prevent the public using a dangerous part of the highway of which they could not have any accurate knowledge. They did neither, but merely did that which they thought would make it last till spring, becoming quasi insurers that it would last so long.
The evidence on the part of the defendants as to the dangerous character of the bridge waswery strong, and the learned judge said, “ Among all hands certainly the bridge has been proved to be a most deficient structure and in a bad, dangerous condition.”
The duty of the defendants was therefore plain and positive to close up the bridge, and if it had been done this accident could not have happened. In Gibbs v. Trustees of the Liverpool Docks, 3 Hurlst. & N. 164, the Exchequer Chamber held, that when they knew the dock could not be navigated without danger they should have closed it to the public, “ and for the consequences of this breach of duty we think they are responsible in an action.” This was affirmed in the House of Lords; Law Rep. 1 H. L. 98, June 5th 1866; Eng. & Irish Appeals, 35 L. J. R. Exch. 225.
Instead of this they permitted it to be used by the public generally with loaded wagons and horses and on foot. This was clearly a breach of duty, and in relation to a structure forming a necessary and. essential part of a highway across a deep and rapid creek with rocky shores, and which the public took upon trust as regarded safe by the defendants who were bound to maintain it and keep it in repair.
Such a bridge appears to the persons travelling over it to be safe until it falls. In practice it is used up to the last moment. The duty therefore of the defendants is not simply to warn, but to prevent its use by closing it up until the danger is removed.
The court therefore in its answer to the plaintiff’s 3d point erred in negativing it, because the duty was imposed upon the defendants of either putting the bridge into complete repair or of closing it up so as to prevent the passage of the public ; and therefore if the plaintiff knew the condition of the bridge, he had reason to believe that the defendants did not think so, and therefore they were bound to give him and the public distinct notice or warning not to use the bridge.
It was not a case of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff at all. It was the case that defendants, trusting that the bridge would last some months longer, neglected, 1, the duty of repairing; and 2, the imperative duty of closing it until its dangerous condition was removed.- Whilst it was passed over every day by the public, there could not be on the part of any one, by simply using the bridge in the ordinary way, such a contributory negligence as would, prevent the plaintiff’s recovery *210for an injury which he never would knowingly have been a party in causing.
If the ruling of the court is correct, then it is unnecessary for those who have intrusted to them the maintenance and repair of bridges over our streams and rivers to repair them and keep them in good order and safe for the public, but simply to let them go to decay and become dangerous, but keep them open for public use, and then when an accident happens causing serious bodily injury or even loss of life, proving that its dangerous condition was well known, and leaving it to the jury that if the injured party know of it it was contributory negligence on his part for him to put a foot on it. A railroad company with high tre.stle bridges, with the same force might say to a passenger, “ You knew our road was very dangerous, why did you run the risk of an accident and consequent injury ?”
A bridge looks fair until it breaks down; it is not like a pit which you can see and avoid; but an excavation in a street or road made for a lawful purpose must be fenced and lighted, and a dangerous bridge must be closed up.
This ease has been tried with extreme positions on both sides, but what we have said above shows that there was error in the rulings of the court.
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.