Korte v. St. Paul Trust Co.

Collins, J.

In this action it has been sought to hold several de-fendantsliable for injuries received through neglect in failing to properly keep covered a coal bole in tbe sidewalk in front of a hotel build-' ing, situated on one of tbe principal streets in the city of St. Paul, erected in 1883, by tbe late Norman W. Kittson, of whose last will and testament this appellant is executor. Tbe action was dismissed as to tbe other defendants on tbe trial, but a verdict was rendered against tbe appellant as such executor. One- Roche bad tbe contract for making all necessary excavations for tbe building. An ordinance of tbe city authorized tbe board of public works to grant-permits to make excavations for tbe purpose of building areas or cellars outside of tbe property line and into tbe street, tbe outside walls of such areas or cellars not to be located more than six feet from tbe property line. These permits were issuable to lot owners or lessees or tenants, or to a contractor or builder for either, and tbe real purpose of tbe two sections of tbe ordinance, which have been made a part of tbe record, seems to have been -to guard against accidents pending tbe work of construction. Roche complied with tbe conditions of tbe ordinance, and obtained a permit in bis own name to excavate in front of tbe proposed building, and this permit was introduced in evidence. Appellant also offered in evidence duly-certified copies of ordinances passed and approved while tbe hotel building was in process of erection, — one on June 22, tbe other August 7, 1883. It may here be observed that tbe walk in question was not laid until November of that year. Tbe first of tbe ordinances provided for the election of a building inspector, and regulated tbe construction of buildings. Tbe manner *532in which walls for areas should be built by persons "desirous of utilizing the space” under sidewalks was prescribed in section 72, and also that openings in walks for the admission of coal or light should be covered with certain materials, no smooth surfaces being permitted. It was further provided in this section that, where sidewalks were to be thus .used,—that is, for areas, — a permit should first be obtained, specifying the details of construction. The second of these ordinances conferred upon the board of public works the power to grant permits to build outside walls eight feet from the property line, whenever the sidewalk was of sufficient width to allow it. Both of these ordinances were excluded by the court, on plaintiff’s objection, counsel for appellant stating that he did not propose to show that permits had been obtained under either. Boche excavated into the street in front of the lot, so that the outside wall was eight, instead of six, feet from the property line, and the area was about ten feet deep. Another contractor laid a substantial stone sidewalk over the excavation, and in this placed a coal hole, with an iron frame and proper cover. We do not understand that the plaintiff’s counsel find fault with the original construction of the walk, or of the coal hole, or of the manner in which it was covered, nor do they claim that either became out of repair; so that their client’s injuries were the result of negligence on the part of the owner of the property of the character considered in the recent case of City of Wabasha v. Southworth, 54 Minn. 79, (55 N. W. Rep. 818.) They do attach some importance to the fact that while Boche was actually authorized, according to his permit, to excavate but six feet from the property line, he did excavate eight; but it is apparent that the width of the area had nothing to do with the accident which befell the plaintiff, and the fact that the area was two feet wider than prescribed in the permit contributed not at all to her cause of action, if she had one. Mr. Kittson died in May, 1888, and the appellant became the executor of his last will and testament, as before stated. In 1890 appellant, as such executor, duly rented the premises in question to one Ferris, for the term of three years. In July, 1891, Ferris became insolvent, and, under the statute, made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors to defendant Title Insurance & Trust Company, which must not be confounded with appellant Trust Company. On Octo*533ber 20, 1891, and while the premises were in the possession and under the control of defendant Title Insurance & Trust Company, as assignee of the lessee, Ferris, the cover of the coal hole was removed by two men, that they might put coal into the area, and, while so uncovered, plaintiff, without fault on her part, stepped into the hole as she was walking along the street, receiving the injuries complained of. The record now before us does not disclose for whom these men were acting when they removed the cover, but they were strangers to appellant executor.

Counsel for plaintiff base her right to recover upon the proposition, tersely stated, that, in the absence of municipal authority, the abutting owner is liable for all injurious consequences resulting from the maintenance of a coal hole in the sidewalk adjacent to his premises, and that there was an entire absence of municipal authority in this case. We cannot assent to the proposition, taken as a whole. The existing right of abutting owners and occupants to make necessary excavations and to maintain areas was recognized in St. Paul as early as 1869, when the ordinance was passed under which Eoche secured his permit. We have not been referred to any express authority for the construction of areas, but evidently the council assumed that authority existed, for the ordinance merely regulated the manner in which the work should be done. In authority to build there must necessarily be included a right to maintain the area, and to use it in the ordinary way, and, although coal holes in the walks covering these areas were not expressly mentioned in the ordinance of 1869, it is the fact that not only were such apertures necessary to the proper use of the areas underneath, but that their existence was clearly recognized in the ordinance of June 22, 1883, (section 72,) which simply regulated a right theretofore held by the- abutter, by implication, at least, to utilize the space in front of his property line underneath the sidewalk. It did not expressly grant authority to put in coal holes, but seems to have assumed its prior existence. It merely regulated the manner in which they should be covered. The municipal legislation we have referred to, all in force when this walk was built, proceeded upon the assumption that by general usage a municipal license existed to do exactly what was here done,—to make the aperture, and to provide an adequate and suitable cover for it. It has been held *534that authority to build and maintain areas may be implied in the absence of any action of the corporate authorities to the contrary, such authorities being aware of the progress of the work. Nelson v. Godfrey, 12 Ill. 22. To the same effect is Gridley v. City of Bloomington, 68 Ill. 47. Again, it has been said that what may be deemed a reasonable and proper use of a public or private way depends much on the local situation and much on public usage. The general use and acquiescence of the public is evidence of the right. O’Linda v. Lothrop, 21 Pick. 292. The owner of abutting premises, Avho has excavated and maintains an area under a street sidewalk, covered with flagstones, with the consent of the municipal authorities, is not guilty of maintaining a nuisance, so long as it is securely covered; and if the authorities permit the excavation, and that it be used for area purposes continuously for a period of years, with openings properly covered or secured, such continued uses will be presumed to be permitted and assented to by city authority, and such excavation and use will not be regarded as. a nuisance maintained by the owner, Babbage v. Powers, 7 N. Y. Supp. 306, affirmed 130 N. Y. 281, (29 N. E. Rep. 132;) and, to conclude on this point, this court, in City of Wabasha v. Southworth, supra, placed defendant’s liability upon his lack or want of ordinary care in riot taking-reasonable precautions to keep a hatchway in the walk, in front of a building occupied by a tenant, which led to the cellar, in a proper state of repair, and not upon the ground that an excavation under the walk, made without affirmative municipal license, is per se unlawful and a nuisance. The law on the subject, as laid down in the leading case of Fisher v. Thirkell, 21 Mich. 1, was approved and adopted, which is that areas, when properly and safely made, are not illegal in themselves, although made without any legislative permission or that of the municipal authorities. Their legality, said the court, seems to have always been assumed without showing such special authority or any authority. There are cases to be found in the books which go to the extent of holding that abutting owners making and maintaining areas and cellarways underneath sidewalks are responsible for all injuries resulting from the want of entire safety, although properly constructed, thus making the owner an insurer against all injuries which may arise; but all of these *535cases rest upon the principle that such excavations are unlawful in themselves, ab initio. Such cases are not in point here. Nor are the facts now presented such as were before us in the Wabasha City Case, where the defendant claimed exemption from liability because his premises were in the possession of a tenant, for the hatchway there involved was in an unsafe condition when the tenant obtained his lease, a condition resulting from natural causes, and which grew worse as time passed. The coal hole into which plaintiff fell was not constructed contrary to legislation on the subject or in disregard of it, nor was it faulty in such construction, nor had it become out of repair. The accident happened while the premises were in the exclusive possession of a tenant, and because of the carelessness of persons who were in no way connected with appellant as agents or servants, or in any other capacity. As the premises were not let with a nuisance upon them, and appellang had nothing to do with the immediate cause of the accident, the estate it represents is not liable in damages to this plaintiff. See Fisher v. Thirkell, supra; Johnson v. McMillan, 69 Mich. 36, (36 N. W. Rep. 803;) Adams v. Fletcher, 17 R. I. 137, (20 Atl. Rep. 263.) We do not regard, as before intimated, that there is anything in plaintiff’s point that she can recover because Roche carried the outside wall two feet further into the street than was authorized. Evidently, the regulation in respect to the space to be used for areas was for the benefit of the city itself, and a disregard of it, if there was one, did not contribute to plaintiff’s injury at all. That the provision respecting distance from the property line at which outside walls should be placed was merely designed for the protection of the city is apparent from reading the ordinance. The wall as built did not interfere with a fire plug, nor with an outer corner of a sidewalk, nor did it encroach upon the street outside the walk. Again, soon after Roche obtained the permit, while the work was in progress, and before the area was completed, the ordinance was amended, practically, so that areas could be built eight instead of six feet from outside to outside. This is just what Mr. Roche did, with the knowledge, evidently, of the building inspector, and the owner of the property continued its use for many years, no objection being made by the authorities. The insistence of counsel for plaintiff that, in any event, this departure from the terms of *536the original ordinance made, and, because Roche failed to obtain a new permit covering the excavation of the additional two feet, the whole area became, a public nuisance, is without merit. Order reversed.

(Opinion published 56 N. W. Rep. 346.)