Opinion by
Mr. Chief Justice McBride.It is contended that the complaint is insufficient as against the city for the reasons (1) that the claim was not presented within six months after the injury, as required by the charter, and- (2) that by virtue of Section 200 of the city charter, the city is exempt from liability. We will consider these contentions in the order above named.
1. The first contention is settled adversely to the claim of respondent in Sheridan v. City of Salem, 14 *559Or. 328 (12 Pac. 925), wherein it was held that a provision of the charter which provided that “no claim against the city shall be paid until it is audited and allowed by the common council” did not apply to claims arising ex delicto. It is true that the language used in the Salem charter is probably not quite so comprehensive as the language employed in the Vale charter. The words ‘ ‘ claim for damages ’ ’ used in the Vale charter, if standing alone and without reference to other provisions of the charter, would seem to be broad enough to include claims arising ex delicto. But a fair construction would seem to be that which would refer the language to such claims as the charter authorized the city to audit and pay. The object was to give the city the option of examining into the merits of the claim and paying it without an action, if deemed proper. In view of the fact that Section 200 of the charter expressly declares that the city shall not be liable for claims of the character herein described, it cannot be held that it was in the legislative mind to require the presentation to the council of a claim which it was expressly prohibited from paying. To do so would be to require the performance of a vain and useless ceremony. The authorities upon this subject are conflicting and will be found collated in an exhaustive note in Henry v. Lincoln, 93 Neb. 331 (140 N. W. 664, as reported in 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 174), and in Miller v. Mullan, 17 Idaho, 28 (104 Pac. 660, 19 Ann. Cas. 1107).
The next question presented involves the liability of the city. In the language of Justice Thayee in Sheridan v. City of Salem, 14 Or. 328 (12 Pac. 925): “It is the same old ugly question that has wearied the patience of courts and attorneys for many years. ’ ’ Very early in our judicial history in O’Harra v. City *560of Portland, 3 Or. 525, it was held that a provision in a city charter that the city should not be liable for an injury occasioned by a defect in its sidewalk, was a valid exercise of the municipal powers. The case does not appear to have been very thoroughly argued or considered. The objection made was that the charter provision was violative of Article I, Section 21, of our Constitution, which provides that “No law impairing the obligation of contracts shall ever be passed.” The court expressed its inability to see how this provision could possibly apply and overruled the objection summarily. No other constitutional phase of the case was argued or considered. The matter was ag-ain considered in Rankin v. Buckman, 9 Or. 253, which was not an action against the city but against the members of the board of trustees of the City of East Portland, for damages caused by a defective roadway. The charter provision involved in that case, was as follows:
“The City of East Portland is not liable to any one for any loss or injury to person or property growing out of any casualty or accident to such person or property, on account of the condition of any street or public ground therein, but this section does not exonerate any officer of the City of East Portland, or any other person, from such liability, when such casualty or accident is caused by the willful neglect of a duty enjoined upon such officer or person by the law, or by the gross negligence or willful conduct of such officer or person in any other respect.”
In that case the court held that the effect of the charter provision in question was to shift the liability of the city and place it upon the delinquent officers. As the city was not a party, this part of the opinion was merely dictum and yet it has largely furnished the *561foundation for similar holdings by this court: Colby v. City of Portland, 85 Or. 359 (166 Pac. 537).
Mattson v. Astoria, 39 Or. 577 (65 Pac. 1066, 87 Am. St. Rep. 687), involved the consideration of a provision of the city charter of Astoria, which provided that neither the city nor any member of the council should be liable for any injury arising for any damages resulting from the defective condition of any street, etc. The court held this provision void because repugnant to Article X, Section 1 of the Constitution, which provides that “Every man shall have remedy by due course of law for injury done him in person, property or reputation.” It was there conceded, however, following O’Harra v. City of Portland, 3 Or. 525, that where the remedy against the city officers was left intact, it was competent to exempt the city itself from liability.
In Mattson v. Astoria the court quotes with approval the following language from the opinion of Mr. Justice Earl in Fitzpatrick v. Slocum, 89 N. Y. 358:
‘ ‘ There must be a remedy in such a case, where one is injured,- without any fault of his own, by a defect in one of the streets or bridges of the city, — either against the city or some one of its officers.”
The principal case is important as thoroughly establishing the doctrine that while the city may exempt itself, it can only do so when it leaves the injured person a remedy against someone. In Batdorff v. Oregon City, 53 Or. 402 (100 Pac. 937, 18 Ann. Cas. 287), this court announced another important doctrine relating to the right of cities to exempt themselves from liability, wherein the charter of Oregon City provided:
‘ ‘ Oregon City is not liable to anyone for any loss or injury to person or property growing out of any *562casualty or accident happening to such person or property on account of the condition of any street or public ground therein; but this action does not exonerate any officer of Oregon City or any other person from such liability, when such casualty or accident is caused by the willful neglect of any duty enjoined upon such officer or person by law, or by the gross negligence or willful misconduct of such officer or person in any other respect. ’ ’
This court held the provision was invalid, Mr. Chief Justice Moore, saying:
“It will be~remembered that section 128 of the charter of Oregon City exempts that municipality from all aecountabilty, and limits a recovery against its officers for injuries sustained in consequence of their failure to keep the streets in suitable condition for travel — whether it be on account of willful neglect of duty, gross negligence, or willful misconduct. If this clause be upheld as a valid exercise of the legislative will, it necessarily follows that a person will be remediless who sustains a pecuniary loss in consequence of an improved street being in a defective condition which was occasioned by ordinary negligence. As councilmen are liable for injury caused by their indifference in failing to repair a street, so, a fortiori, they might, by enactment, be rendered accountable when such neglect is the want of that diligence which even careless men are accustomed to exercise (I Words & Phrases, 3168); but, where a recovery is restricted by the act of incorporation to gross negligence and limited to the officers of a city, the charter practically denies a remedy to any person injured, contravenes Section 10, Article I, Constitution of Oregon, is therefore void, and leaves the liability as it existed at common law, whereby the city is accountable for such negligence: Mattson v. Astoria, 39 Or. 577 (65 Pac. 1066, 87 Am. St. Rep. 687).”
This would seem to settle firmly the rule in this state, that before a city can exempt itself from a lia*563bility which exists both at common law and by virtue of our Constitution, it must provide an equivalent remedy; one reasonably adequate to serve the purpose of the one taken away. In subsequent cases it has been assumed that where a city charter provided in general terms that any officers of the city charged with the duty of keeping a street in repair, should be liable for injuries arising from their neglect to perform such duty, furnished an equivalent remedy, and that such provision was sufficient to exempt the city from responsibility.
In Colby v. City of Portland, 85 Or. 359 (166 Pac. 537), it was pointed out that such a provision did not furnish a remedy substantially equivalent to the one taken away, for the reason that while a city was liable on the principle of respondeat superior .for the wrongful neglect of its officers to keep streets in repair, the members of the council were not so liable; but that if they had provided funds wherewith to make repairs and had used ordinary care in selecting subordinates to examine into the condition of the streets and provided an adequate system of reports from such subordinates, they were not liable for the negligence of such subordinates, and the charter had not attempted to make them so liable, and in the many divisions of duties of city officers there was such an amount of lost responsibility that the injured person’s right of recovery was finally whittled down to a cause of action against some obscure inspector, usually irresponsible.
In the case last mentioned we intimated a doubt as to the constitutionality of a charter provision which took away from a citizen a perfectly plain and efficacious remedy, and left in its place a partial and unsubstantial one; and this conviction has grown stronger in the mind of the writer from further consideration of *564the subject and examination of the authorities, as well as from a knowledge of the fact that the rule announced in O’Harra v. Portland, and Rankin v. Buckman, and followed in other cases, has not been found in practice to be workable to the extent of affording adequate redress to persons injured by reason of neglect in the repair of streets. In the language of Woodard, C. J., Rhines v. Clark, 51 Pa. St. 96:
“To take away the common-law rights of a citizen without giving him a substantial and adequate redress by statute, would be oppression and injustice; would be violative of his constitutional immunities.”
2. This is merely preparatory to a discussion of the concrete question here presented. There is no legal obligation resting upon a city to build sidewalks in the first instance. It may leave its streets in a state of nature and not be responsible for not having improved them, but if it chooses to improve them and thereby extends to the public an invitation to walk upon them, it must use reasonable diligence to keep them in repair. It cannot shift responsibility having once assumed it, without giving persons who may be injured by defective walks some reasonable adequate remedy for such injury.
3. In the case at bar the charter has not authorized the city to construct sidewalks; that duty is expressly imposed upon the abutting property owner. The council may direct him to make the improvement and prescribe the plan upon which it shall be made, but the duty to build the walk in the first instance and to keep it in repair thereafter, is primarily upon the property owner. It is true that if the property owner fails to keep a walk in repair, the law requires the city engineer after notice to the owner to make such repairs at his final expense; but after all it is the owner *565who is primarily the person to make repairs. There is justice under such circumstances in requiring the owner to be responsible for any damage which may ensue by reason of his neglect. If the city engineer fails to give the notice required or if in default of the owner making repairs, he or the council with knowledge of such default, allows the defective condition to continue, there is justice in requiring these delinquent officers and the owner to answer for such delinquency, instead of saddling it upon the general taxpayers. There is respectable authority for the proposition that the legislature may entirely absolve a city from liability for injuries arising by reason of defective streets or sidewalks, and that such legislation is not in derogation of a constitutional provision, similar to Article X, Section 1 of our Constitution: Goddard v. Lincoln, 69 Neb. 594 (96 N. W. 273).
But as already shown, this court has taken a different view and held that in order to exempt a municipal corporation an equivalent remedy must be provided. Here the legislative authority has placed the primary duty of constructing and repairing sidewalks upon the owner of abutting property, and has expressly declared such owner liable for failure to perform that duty. It has not attempted to take away the remedy that always existed against the officers of the city for failure to cause repair of defects coming to their knowledge, which latter remedy while not always perfect and complete, will be found sufficient in many cases. The owner of the abutting property is prima facie solvent, and it is not required that the remedy afforded should go to the extent of guaranteeing the immediate collection of any judgment that *566might be obtained, if upon the whole it appears that it is plain and reasonably adequate.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice Moore concurs in the result.