Board of Commissioners v. Brown

89 Ind. 48
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1883
DocketNo. 10,548
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 89 Ind. 48 (Board of Commissioners v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Brown, 89 Ind. 48 (Ind. 1883).

Opinion

Morris, C.

The appellee presented to the appellant a claim for damages alleged to have been sustained, by reason of an injury to his mare while crossing over a bridge on one of the highways of the county of Madison.

The complaint describes the highway, and alleges that fifteen years before the appellant had erected, and since partially maintained, a wooden bridge along the line of said highway, over and across a certain pond ; that said bridge, when first erected, was an open bridge; that it had afterward decayed and become rotten and unsound, and, by the carelessness and neglect of the appellant, was allowed to become out of repair and unsafe and dangerous; that on the 24th day of November, 1881, the appellee drove his team, consisting of one horse and a mare attached to a wagon, along said public highway and upon said bridge, and that by reason of said bridge being out of repair, and without fault or neglect on his part, his [49]*49said mare, while attempting to cross said bridge, thrust her foot through said bridge, which caused her to fall, and in her attempts to extricate her foot she broke and so injured the same as to render her wholly worthless; that said injury was occasioned solely by the fault and negligence of the appellant.

The board refused to allow the claim, and the appellee appealed to the circuit court. The cause was submitted to a jury for trial in the circuit court. The appellee having introduced his evidence in support of his claim, the appellant filed a demurrer to the evidence. The court overruled the •demurrer, and final judgment was rendered for the appellee.

The errors assigned are as follows:

1st. The court erred in overruling the appellant’s demurrer to the evidence.

2d. The court erred in rendering judgment for the appellee.

The questions presented by the record and discussed by the appellant are:

First. Was the appellant, at the time the injury to the appellee’s mare happened, bound to keep the bridges upon the public highways of the county in repair and reasonably safe for travel ?

Second. Was the structure upon which the appellee’s animal was injured a bridge within the meaning of the law, and such an one as the board of county commissioners was bound to keep in repair?

The appellant contends that the act of 1881, in,relation to the control and repair of highways, became a law on the 19th day of September, 1881, some two months before the injury complained of; that by this law the superintendence and control of highways passed from the board of county commissioners to the several township superintendents, whose election is provided for by this act; that as this act makes it the duty of these superintendents to repair highways and bridges in their respective townships, the boards of county commissioners are no longer liable for the non-repair of bridges, etc.

[50]*50Granting the proposition contended for by the appellant, it can not affect the question now presented for decision. The act should not be construed to take from the county board their control of, and power over, the^public bridges of the county until the election of the township superintendents provided for. By the act of 1881, R. S. 1881, section 5064,. the township superintendents were not to be elected until the first Monday in April, 1882. Until the election of such superintendents the county boards, under section 2892, R. S. 1881, then in force, had control of all bridges in the county, and it was their duty to keep the same in repair. Assuming the structure in question to be a bridge within the meaning of the law, it was, we think, the duty of the appellant to keep it in repair and reasonably safe for travel at the time the appellee’s mare was injured. There was then no superintendent to take charge of the bridges in the sevei’al townships of the county, and it was the duty of the county board to do so. House v. Board, etc., 60 Ind. 580 (28 Am. R. 657); Pritchett v. Board, etc., 62 Ind. 210.

In the former case the court says: “ The obligation thus imposed upon the board, to cause all bridges in the county to be kept in repair, with ample power to provide means to discharge the obligation, carries with it a corresponding right in every one having occasion, in the usual course of travel, to use the' bridges, to have the obligation fulfilled, and the bridges kept-in repair. And it seems to us to follow, that where the board, negligently suffers such bridge to be out of repair, whereby a person, in the ordinary use of it, is injured in person or property, without his own fault, he must have an action against the board for damages; otherwise, there will be a wrong without a remedy.”

At the time the appellee’s mare was injured it was, by the express provisions of the statute, the duty of the board to keep the bridges of the county in repair, and the county still had, as before, the control of means to discharge the duty and obligation thus imposed. It follows that if the board negli[51]*51gently failed to discharge the duty enjoined by the statute, it is responsible to one who is thereby injured without fault on his part.

Second. Was the structure upon which the appellee’s mare was injured a bridge which the appellant was bound to repair? and, if so, was it out of repair, and was the appellee’s mare injured thereby without fault on his part? It is said that sec. 2892 must be construed in connection with secs. 2885, 2886 and 2887, and counsel refer us to Driftwood, etc., Turnpike Co. v. Board, etc., 72 Ind. 226. The latter sections relate to advances to be made for the construction and repair of bridges, and not to the causing of repaix’S to be made. In the case referred to the coux’t says: While the commissionex-s must cause the bridges to be kept in repair, the expense must be borne by the road district, so far as it is able, * and the residue by the county.”

The testimony tended strongly to show that the appellee’s mare was injured in passing over what the witnesses all call a bridge, constructed many years ago over a pond crossed by the public highway upon which he was travelling. It also showed that this bridge or structure was, at the time the injury occurred, badly out of repair, and that it had been out of repair for several months prior to the injury. One of the witnesses describes the structure as follows: It appears to have been built up in a kind of pen fashion. It is built up about three logs high; three stringer’s laid across, and slabs split and laid over them to make a bridge. I think it is now in the same place. It is about two feet from the ground, and seventy-five yai’ds long; it was built aci'oss a button-xvood pond. There is a fence on both sides of the bi’idge. Those who travel upon the highway must pass over the bridge or go a mile out of the way to get round it.” There was testimony showing that the bridge had been built some twenty-six years before the accident occurred, by the supervisors of the road district in which it is situate. The testimony also showed that some repairs had been made upon the bridge; that there [52]

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Bluebook (online)
89 Ind. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-brown-ind-1883.