Cannady v. Durham.

49 S.E. 50, 137 N.C. 72, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 30, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 49 S.E. 50 (Cannady v. Durham.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannady v. Durham., 49 S.E. 50, 137 N.C. 72, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 329 (N.C. 1904).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages from the defendant, the city of Durham, on account of personal injuries sustained by himself through the alleged negligence of the defendant. In his complaint the plaintiff alleged that the defendant permitted, for an unreasonable time, a branch five or six feet wide and about three feet deep to run across and through the sidewalk on West Pine street and to remain uncovered by a bridge or other device, and that on a dark night, there being, no lamp or rail-guard at the point, while going along the sidewalk he fell in and hurt his knee. The defendant in its answer denied that the city had established a sidewalk or walkway at the point where the plaintiff was hurt, and also set upi against the plaintiff’s cause of action the plea of contributory negligence.

There was no* exception, made to any part of the evidence. The plaintiff requested twelve instructions. ITis Honor gave five as they were asked, refused to give three and modified four of them. He gave six special instructions at the request of the defendant and then submitted the charge in chief. The plaintiff excepted specifically to- every sentence of his Honor’s charge; he excepted to the giving of the six special instructions requested by the defendant and he excepted to the refusal of his Honor to give the plaintiff’s three special requests, one, five, twelve, and to the modification of his four requests numbered two, three, four and six.

The exceptions by the plaintiff to everything the Judge said *74 on the trial has of course caused us to' read all that he said to the jury, with care; and after having done so, we think none of his exceptions ought to be sustained; and we think it only necessary to consider two of the questions raised on the apt-peal: one concerning the- instructions given in connection with the evidence bearing on whether or not the city had established a sidewalk at the point where plaintiff was hurt, and the other upon the question of the alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff.

If the city had established a sidewall? on the west side of Pine street down to the branch a few feet below Eight’s house, where plaintiff was hurt, then the plaintiff would have been entitled to instructions one and five, asked by him. Whether or not the city had established a sidewalk at that point was a question of fact to be settled by admission in the answer or by evidence on the trial. In the answer it was denied by the defendant. Several witnesses testified that there had been no conveyance of the land to the city, no condemnation of the land, or any appropriation or control of the same by the city; and several testified that no work had ever been done on the street by the city. The only evidence relied on by the plaintiff to show either appropriation of the strip of land as a street, or that the city had ever had control of it, was the testimony of Eilliobt and John B. Christian. Elliott said that in 1897 or 1899 he sold the property bordering on Pine street-, where the plaintiff was hurt, after having divided it into lots, and that there were no sidewalks there when he sold it, and that the only work the town had ever done was to make a little water-drain or ditch on the sides of the street, and to keep tire ditch cleaned out. Pie said further that after he sold the land on Pine street “the purchasers built upon their lots and that of course made the sidewalk.”

The witness Christian said that he had been a street commissioner of the city of Durham for many years; that the *75 town never laid off any sidewalk on Pine street and bad never done any work there from Proctor street, and that the walkway was of the make of the travelers; that the city had built and worked the street at that point. He said he did not remember that either of the street committee had ever visited that part of the city, and that he took his orders from the chairman of the street committee. He said further that when Sam Hight was building his house he was there and directed him to move it back from the sidewalk, because he was building it too near, and that Plight did move it back further from the sidewalk.

The fifth prayer of the plaintiff for special instructions (which his Honor declined to give) was in these words: “If you believe the evidence in this case you will answer the first issue (whether the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of the plaintiff) ‘Tes.’ ” That instruction was based on the testimony of Christian that he ordered Hight when he was building his house to move it back from the sidewalk and that Hight obeyed the order; and upon the plaintiff’s testimony that while walking along the smooth even walk just south of Eight’s house on his way home he stepped into the branch, the bank of which was perpendicular on his side, and hurt his leg. The contention is that Christian, the street commissioner, was acting for the city of Durham, and also that as street commissioner he had the power to appropriate and take charge of the land for a sidewalk for the city. We cannot admit that any such powers reside in a street commissioner.

The first prayer for instructions asked by the plaintiff (which was declined by his Honor) was in these words: “It was the duty of the city of Durham to repair the streets and sidewalks of the city and to make and keep them reasonably safe and convenient for persons traveling to and from on them.” The plaintiff insisted that that instruction should have been given, for the reason that it was alleged in the com *76 plaint that the city had established a sidewalk on the west-side of P’ine street down to the point where he was hurt, and that that allegation was not denied in the answer. Upon a reading of the answer it must be admitted that the defendant was very cautious in the wording of its denial. In fact it may be said that it was ingeniously done, but still effectively so. As we have said, the main question of fact in the case was whether or not the defendant had established and assumed control of the ground where the plaintiff was hurt as a street. It was denied in the answer, and there was evidence that it had not- been so established or appropriated. His Honor submitted that question fairly to the jury with proper instructions on the law as to the effect of their finding, as the following parts of his charge will show.

The plaintiff asked his Honor to instruct the jury: “If you find from the evidence that the defendant permitted the sidewalk on the west side of Pine street, within the corporate limits of the city, to remain without any bridge or covering over a branch five or six feet wide and three feet deep, without a guard or r'ail, and that the north embankment of the branch was perpendicular or about so, and that defendant failed to light the same, and permitted such conditions to exist for several years, this would be negligence; and if this was the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff you will answer the first issue 'Yes.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.E. 50, 137 N.C. 72, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannady-v-durham-nc-1904.