Britten v. City of Eau Claire

51 N.W.2d 30, 260 Wis. 382, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 370
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 51 N.W.2d 30 (Britten v. City of Eau Claire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Britten v. City of Eau Claire, 51 N.W.2d 30, 260 Wis. 382, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 370 (Wis. 1952).

Opinion

Gehl, J.

The city contends that at the time in question it was engaged in carrying on' a governmental function and that therefore it is not liable. As appears from the verdict the case was tried upon the theory that the injury resulted from the maintenance of an attractive nuisance. The attractive-nuisance doctrine as it is applied in Wisconsin generally, without particular reference to municipalities, is that one who “leaves an instrumentality or premises where children have a right to be or where children by reason of their childish instincts are likely for some apparent reason to be attracted” must “exercise ordinary care under all the circumstances to prevent injury to children.” Routt v. Look, 180 Wis. 1, 8, 191 N. W. 557.

The city’s employee had had previous experience with this machine to indicate to him that it was attractive to children; he had been warned against danger of injury to children *386 unless proper precautions were taken; he had seen children about the area during the day in question and had been instructed to leave the gate down or disconnect the controls. These are circumstances to permit the application • of the doctrine of attractive nuisance. Angelier v. Red Star Yeast & Products Co. 215 Wis. 47, 254 N. W. 351.

The city does not argue strenuously against the rule as we have stated it, nor would it, if we understand its position correctly, urge its inapplicability in this case if the actor were a nonpublic agency. It contends, however, that the rule that a municipal corporation is not liable for the negligence of its employees while engaged in carrying on a governmental function is applicable. The rule has long been recognized in Wisconsin. Pohland v. Sheboygan, 251 Wis. 20, 27 N. W. (2d) 736. It does not appear, however, from any case which has been called to our attention, nor from our own search, that the question whether a municipality may be held accountable under the attractive-nuisance doctrine and under circumstances as are present here has been determined by this court.

The doctrine of attractive nuisance does not apply to municipal corporations when the act creating the instrumentality is performed in the exercise of a governmental function. It does, where it is created when the municipality operates in a proprietary capacity. 38 Am. Jur., Municipal Corporations, p. 283, sec. 588. So it becomes necessary to determine whether the city in parking the tractor and scraper off the street after completing the day’s work of grading for sidewalk and boulevard improvement was engaged in a governmental or a proprietary capacity.

The doctrine that immunity from liability should be granted to the state and municipalities while engaged in governmental operations rests upon a weak foundation. Its origin seems to be found in the ancient and fallacious notion that the king can do no wrong. The rule is one of such long *387 standing and has become so firmly established as a parcel of Wisconsin’s jurisprudence, however, that we should hesitate to abandon it. We consider that if it is to be abandoned it is only proper that the request therefor should be made to the legislature. But we do consider that the precedent, lacking . support in both logic and reason, should not be so construed as to extend the exemption beyond the boundaries of its previous application. And, since we are not-foreclosed by any former decision of this court to consider the direct question before us as á novel one and since none of the precedents disclose a state of facts similar to those which we have for consideration, we conclude that when the city of Eau Claire parked its equipment after completing the day’s work it was functioning in its proprietary capacity and therefore subject to the same rules as to liability for the maintenance of an attractive nuisance as is a nonpublic agency.

Our conclusion is not without precedent. In a case strikingly similar in its facts the supreme court of Pennsylvania permitted recovery where it appeared that a road scraper had been parked by a city’s employees at the end of their day’s work on a vacant lot not belonging to the city, close to a street. The city’s employees had notice of the fact that the scraper was an attraction to children, and a seven-year-old boy while playing on the machine was injured when he turned one of the wheels and his hand was caught in the cogs on one of the flywheels. The court reached the result which it did in face of the rule applicable in Pennsylvania that in the construction and maintenance of streets a municipality is acting in its governmental rather than its business capacity. Reichvalder v. Taylor, 322 Pa. St. 72, 185 Atl. 270.

The defendant, General Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corporation, had issued to the city a policy of insurance by the terms of which it undertook to pay on behalf of the city such sums which the latter should be obliged to pay by reason of the liability imposed by law for bodily injury *388 liability arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of its vehicles. The insurer contends that so far as the equipment here involved is concerned, its liability is limited by the following provisions of the policy:

“The word ‘automobile’ shall mean a land motor vehicle, tractor, or semitrailer, provided the following described equipment shall not be deemed an automobile except while towed by or carried on a motor vehicle not so described: Any crawler-type tractor, farm implement, farm tractor, or trailer not subject to motor vehicle registration, ditch or trench digger, power crane or shovel, grader, scraper, roller, well-drilling machinery, asphalt spreader, concrete mixer, and mixing and finishing equipment for highway work, other than a concrete mixer of the mix-in-transit type. The word ‘trailer’ shall include semitrailer.
“It is agreed that such insurance as is afforded by the policy for bodily injury liability, for property damage liability and for medical payments applies with respect to owned automobiles subject to the following provisions:
“1. Definitions. The words ‘owned automobile’ shall mean a land motor vehicle, trailer or semitrailer owned by the named insured, provided the following-described equipment shall not be deemed an automobile except while towed by or carried on a motor vehicle not so described: Any crawler-type tractor, farm implement, ditch or trench digger, power crane or shovel, grader, scraper, roller, well-drilling machinery, asphalt spreader, concrete mixer, mixing and finishing equipment for highway work, other than a concrete mixer of the mix-in-transit type and, if not subject to motor vehicle registration, any equipment used principally on premises owned by or rented to the named insured, farm tractor or trailer. The word ‘automobile’ wherever used in the policy with respect to the insurance afforded under this in-dorsement, shall include ‘owned automobile.’ ”

It is urged that the use of the crawler-type tractor, since it was not at the time being towed or carried on a motor vehicle, was not such as to render it liable under the terms of the policy.

*389

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.W.2d 30, 260 Wis. 382, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/britten-v-city-of-eau-claire-wis-1952.