Opinion by
Judge BarkerAffirming.
The city of Maysville permitted the January & Wood Company to construct and maintain a wooden *710box sewer from its cotton mills across its own lot under the sidewalk of Short street into the gutter beyond. It was under the earth, and so.covered over as not to be visible to the eye, and the private corporation allowed it to become so stopped up that a pool of water was formed within it. The surplus water overflowed the obstacle, and ran on out into the street.The waste water was very hot, and the appellant in walking over the drain broke through and fell into the pool underneath, by which he was severely scalded receiving, serious and permanent injuries, to recover damages for which he instituted this action against the city. The original petition was twice amended. The general demurrer filed to it, as finally amended, was sustained, whereupon the s plaintiff declined to plead further, and it was dismissed, from which judgment he now appeals.
The original petition stated a good cause of action against the city, because it alleged that the drain was defective at a point under the sidewalk, and that the plaintiff broke through and fell into the pool beneath while lawfully using the highway, and the municipality knew, or by the exercise of ordinary diligence could have known, of the defective drain and the dangerous pool beneath the sidewalk; but by amendment it was alleged that the pool of hot water had accumulated either under the sidewalk or at a point within the private property of the January & Wood Company; that one of these alternative allegations of fact was true, but plaintiff did not know which was true. The rule is, that where facts are stated in the alternátive with the allegation that one or the other is true, but the pleader does not know which is true, both of the alternative statements must present -a cause of action. If one, even if true, fails to present a cause of action, the pleading is bad. Civ. Gode Prac. subsec. 4, § 113; City of Louisville v. Muldoon, 94 Ky. 462; *71115 Ky. L. R. 233, 22 S. W. 847; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Coppage, 7 Ky. Law Rep. 527; and Linck’s Adm’r v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co. 107 Ky. 370, 54 S. W. 184, 21 Ky. L. R. 1097.
This brings us to a consideration of whether or not the municipality was bound, at its peril, to know of the condition of the drain under the January & Wood Campany’s private property. It can not be'successfully disputed that it is the duty of the municipal corporation to exercise reasonable care and diligence to keep its highways free from dangerous obstructions, and it is equally true that, if it knowingly permits holes or excavations so near the sidewalk as to render the use of the highway dangerous to travelers, it is liable for injuries resulting from its negligence in this regard. In the Modern Law of Municipal Corporations, vol. 2, §’1304, it is said: “Where there are excavations on private lots adjacent to a sidewalk, the city must use reasonable care to protect pedestrians from falling therein.” This quotation was approved in the.case of City of Carlisle v. Secrest, 75 S. W. 268, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 336, and the same rule was enunciated by the Supreme Court of Iowa in the case of Hall v. Town of Manson, 68 N. W. 922, 34 L. R. A. 207. But there is a difference between requiring a city to barricade against visible excavations, which are so near a sidewalk as to be dangerous to pedestrians without the barricade, and requiring it to extend its investigation into the condition of private drains <on private property. In the first place, the excavations being plainly visible, the city must take notice of them, and see to it that the traveling public is protected from injury by proper barricades. But where, as here, the danger is beneath the surface, and, being invisible, cannot be known without digging into the earth, a possibility of injury is presented beyond the reach of the care which the law devolves *712upon the municipality for the protection of the public. "Wherever a danger — whether it be a shattered and unsafe wall or an excavation — is visible, and is so near the public highway as to render its use dangerous, then the law casts upon the municipality the duty of doing whatever is reasonably necessary to prevent injury accruing to those in the lawful use of the thoroughfare But the rule does not extend beyond this. It does not require 'the municipality to trespass upon private property by digging into the earth in order to ascertain the condition of private drains or sewers.
The permission of the city to the private corporation only extended to the crossing of the drain' beneath the sidewalk. Up to the line of the thoroughfare, the owner of the premises did not require the permission of the municipality. The public corporation was not, therefore, obliged to know the condition of the sewer or drain underneath the property of the private corporation. There was nothing to put it upon notice of the underlying and concealed danger. The plaintiff resided with his parents upon the property of the private corporation. They were its tenants, and were in position to know more about the condition of the drain than were the officers of the municipality. The boards constituting ’the top of the drain, owing to the action of the water, after the lapse of a long time had rotted. They were covered with earth, which concealed, but did not protect the passer from, the danger beneath. As the city was under no duty to inspect the private drain of the January & Wood Company within the line of its property, it cannot be held responsible for an injury accruing to the plaintiff by reason of a defect in the drain before it reached the sidewalk, of which it did not have actual notice. This being true, one of the alternative state of facts alleged by the plaintiff in his petition, as amended, does not present a cause of action, and, under the rule already *713announced, the pleading as a whole did not state a cause of action. The court correctly sustained the general demurrer of the city.
Judgment affirmed.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.