Taubman v. City of Lexington

Ellison, J.

This is a suit for damages for alleged Injuries to a pair of horses, harness, double-tree and sleigh, the property of plaintiffs, While hired to, and in possession of, one Joseph Bethel, on the twenty-fifth day of January, 1885, charging that defendant, a municipal corporation, unlawfully, carelessly, wrongfully and negligently, permitted Wm. H. Ewing, Alfred B. Léard and John C. Young, a firm to whom defendant had, by ordinance, passed April 21, 1884, by the city council and accepted by defendant, April 22, 1884, granted the license, franchise and privilege to construct a street railway, along certain streets of said city, to disregard and violate the terms and conditions of said ordinance, whereby public travel in vehicles, at the corner of South and Clark streets, was obstructed and endangered, and charging that such sleigh, while being driven by said Joseph Bethel, along South street, at such corner, without his negligence, as alleged, became entangled and fastened between said so-called guide-rail and the main track rail of said street railway, and that in consequence thereof, the horses broke loose from said sleigh and got beyond the control of said Bethel, and one horse had his leg broken, and was rendered valueless, and the other horse received injuries and damages to the amount of five dollars, and the sleigh to the amount of twenty-*224five dollars, aggregating two hundred, dollars, for which judgment is asked.

Defendant’s answer, containing four separate defences, averred, among other things, that said Ewing, Young, and Leard, constructed such railway, at the place aforesaid, in compliance with the requirements and conditions of such ordinance; that there was sufficient space left and maintained on each side of said street railway track, at such point and place, for the-safe and convenient passage of teams and vehicles, including plaintiffs’ sleigh and horses, and set up contributory negligence on the part of plaintiffs and said driver,' Joseph Bethel, directly contributing to, and causing the injuries and damage complained of by plaintiffs, several parts of which answer were by the court below, on motion of plaintiffs, stricken out.

There was no error in striking out the portions of defendant’s answer complained of. That which was-not a repetition of denials, already made, was either immaterial or irrelevant to the issues in the cause. Omitting the portion stricken out, the answer yet contains all the defences urged by defendant.

The objection to the reception of evidence under the petition, for the reason that it did not' allege notice to defendant of the obstruction complained of, was not well taken for three several reasons. As this defect in the street was occasioned by the act of a party authorized by the corporation to make use of the street, which resulted in producing the defect, the corporation will be liable without notice. Russell v. Columbia, 74 Mo. 480; Swenson v. City of Lexington, 69 Mo. 167 ; Stephens v. City of Macon, 83 Mo. 345. But if notice was necessary it is sufficiently alleged. The charge in the petition is,, that defendant' unlawfully and negligently permitted the street car company to make the obstruction. Defendant could not negligently permit a thing not known to it, or which might not have been known by diligence. Crane v. Railroad, 87 Mo. 588, 594, 595.

*225Again, defendant, by its answer, expressly denies that it had any knowledge or notice of the defect, and has thereby chosen to understand the petition to contain all the facts, in this regard, essential to its liability. Bliss on Code Pleading, sect. 437.

There is a point urged by defendant’s counsel that, in view of the decisions of the supreme court of Missouri, and our duty to follow therrq is not free from difficulty. It is, that though this street was opened and used to its full width, yet, as there was confessedly sufficient width for ordinary travel, in good repair, on either side of the place of the accident, defendant is not liable. The point is based on the cases of Bassett v. St. Joseph (53 Mo. 290) ; Brown v. Glasgow (57 Mo. 156); Craig v. Sedalia (63 Mo. 417), and Tritz v. Kansas City (84 Mo. 632).

We must follow the rules and principles of law as they are announced by the supreme court, but I do not believe it is meant by .these ■ decisions to establish, as a test of plaintiff’s right to recover, when he has used ordinary care, whether or not there was sufficient width of the street in repair for ordinary travel. If so, the trial courts might as well, in ninety-nine cases in a hundred, sustain a demurrer to the evidence, for in about that proportion of the cases there is unobstructed room for passing in other parts of the street.

■ The case of Bassett v. St. Joseph (supra), is the leading case on this subj 3ct, and it has been followed and approved in the succeeding cases. In each of the cases above referred to there is a quotation of a paragraph in the opinion of Bassett v. St. Joseph, which omits the last sentence in the paragraph. That sentence is of the highest importance, as it qualifies all that has been said before. It is that, “ when a street is opened for use, it should be put in a reasonably safe condition.” And so, Judge Black, in Brennan v. City of St. Joseph, a case not yet reported, says, “when a street is thrown open to public *226use it is the duty of the city to keep the same in a condition reasonably safe for persons traveling thereon with ■ordinary care and prudence.”

A city is not bound to exercise all its powers in regard to the opening of streets, but when it does in fact ■exercise such power, it is then its duty to see that the street is in a reasonably safe condition. When the whole of a street is opened for use, the individual has a right to expect that ordinary care and prudence will carry him safely over it.

There are streets in a city which the authorities may deem it expedient to open for public use. So there are streets which may not be needed to their entire width. It is not the duty, in all cases, of the municipality to open these, though it has the power to do it. Yet, as before stated, if it once exercises the power, and thereby invites the public to use them, it must keep them to this extent open, in a reasonably safe condition, for the convenience of travel, .“and whether a given street was in such condition was a practical question to be determined by the jury in each case by the particular circumstances.” Brennan v. City of St. Joseph, supra.

The instructions in the cause are of great length and cannot well be set out in an opinion. A careful consideration of the objections urged to them has led us to conclude that, under the evidence, no substantial or reversible error was committed in the court’s action on those given, amended or refused. While they, perhaps, would not do as precedents for cases of this kind in general, and-while there are propositions contained in some of them that are at least debatable, yet it is not seen where any harm could result therefrom to defendant when applied to the evidence in the cause. The issues in the cause are all submitted to the jury in such terms as to leave no room for misunderstanding.

The testimony of the driver was offered to prove that he had paid plaintiffs a portion of the damage *227claimed. This was excluded by the court, but after-wards, when the witness was recalled, he stated, on cross-examination, that he refused to pay for the injury.

The evidence offered as to whose supervision the track was laid under, and the experience of the superintendent was properly excluded. And so was that offered to show that the driver “had no regular business, and was a person of no means whatever.” We think these things did not have a tendency, as claimed by defendant, to disprove negligence on the part of defendant, nor collusion on the part of the driver and plaintiffs.

Other objections made to evidence have been considered, but are not deemed to be well taken.

Finding no error justifying a reversal, we affirm the judgment.

All concur.