Plaintiff seeks to recover of defendant damages for personal injuries due to a fall upon a defective walk in the city of Corning.
Defendant’s charter provides that “ The city shall not be liable for any injury caused by such highways, streets, alleys, sidewalks or crosswalks \i. e., the highways, streets, alleys, sidewalks and crosswalks of the city] being out of repair, or dangerous from snow, ice or unlawful obstructions, unless actual notice of the unsafe and dangerous condition thereof has been given to the mayor or the city clerk of said city a reasonable time before the happening of such injury.” (Laws of 1905, chap. 142, § 30.) Plaintiff’s complaint was dismissed by the trial court on the ground that it appeared from plaintiff’s opening that actual notice of the defective condition of the walk on which plaintiff fell and was injured had not been given either to the mayor or the city clerk as required by the statute above quoted.
The constitutionality of this provision of the statute must be conceded, and however harsh or unjust it may seem to be in its opera- ' tion, correction must be sought elsewhere than in the courts. (MacMullen v. City of Middletown, 187 N. Y. 37.)
Plaintiff’s claim that actual notice of the defective condition of the walk in question was given to the mayor of the city within the fair meaning of the statute is based solely upon the fact that a sidewalk inspector and one member of defendant’s board of public works did in fact know of the defective condition of the walk some considerable time before the accident; and that, as the sidewalk inspector was authorized, and it was his duty, to go ahead and repair the walk without referring the matter to the board of public works, and as the mayor was a member of the board of public works, which ' board had charge of the streets aiid alleys of the city and power to
Plaintiff’s exceptions should be overruled, motion for new trial denied'and judgment directed for defendant, with costs.
All concurred, except Williams and Kruse, JJ., who dissented in a memorandum by Kruse, J.