De Long v. Oklahoma City

1914 OK 307, 148 P. 701, 47 Okla. 398, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1914
Docket1546
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1914 OK 307 (De Long v. Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Long v. Oklahoma City, 1914 OK 307, 148 P. 701, 47 Okla. 398, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 160 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

BLEAKMOEE, J.

This is an action for damages occasioned by the plaintiff driving into an excavation in a street. A' demurrer to the petition was sustained, and plaintiff appeals.

. It. is alleged in the petition that the defendant is a city -of the first class, and that the block and streets described in the,petition are all within its corporate limits; that a block of ground which is bounded by Lottie street on the west, Kate street' on the east, Ninth street on the north, and Eighth street on the south was, and for a number of years next before the injury complained of *399 had been, open, unimproved, and without buildings thereon, and that there was a roadway running diagonally from a northeasterly direction extending southwest into and intersecting Eighth street near the middle of said block; that said roadway was level and had been constantly and generally traveled for a number of years by the public, and was so connected with said Eighth street as to make a continuous roadway, which' for a number of years had been the best and most accessible ■ way for public travel from the northeast into that part of the city, being worn down and well established as a public roadway and used by the plaintiff and the public generally as such; that the defendant, a number of weeks prior to the injury complained of, excavated a part of said Eighth street between Lottie and Kate streets to a depth of eight feet lower than the roadway across said block, and left at the point where said roadway intersected Eighth street an excavation some eight feet in depth; that defendant put up no barriers or signals of any character to warn travelers coming into the city and using the roadway over and across said block of said excavation, either at the place where the roadway intersected Eighth street and said excavation existed, or at the point where said roadway entered said block on the north side thereof;. that, in the night-time, the plaintiff, ignorant of the existence of said excavation, was traveling said roadway, and, upon reaching the point where the same intersected with Eighth street, was precipitated into said excavation, injured, and thereby damaged.

It is not alleged that in bringing the street to gradé the defendant was negligent, nor that the condition of the street, itself, was defective, and therefore the liability of the city is dependent solely upon its failure to erect and maintain barriers or signals warning plaintiff of the existence of the excavation at the place of his injury.

*400 The question for this court to determine is whether the defendant, a city of the first class, owed any duty to the plaintiff, as a member of the traveling public, in the way of warning him of the danger necessarily to be encountered at the intersection of the street and roadway by one approaching such point from the roadway unaware of said excavation. It is the contention of defendant that it owed no duty to travelers entering its streets from any point save the regularly established entrance at cross-streets or alleys, and in sustaining the demurrer to the petition the trial court so held.

While the holding of the court below is sustained by a very respectable number of cases, yet in declaring the law of this state we stand on what we believe to be the better reasoning, as well as the weight of authority, and hold to the opposite view. However, it must be remembered that the roadway in question, though not laid out or dedicated as a street, was a well-worn and established way and had been used by the public generally for years.

•- The rule laid down in 28 Cyc. 1384 is:

“While a municipal corporation is generally under no obligation to guard dangerous approaches from private property to its streets, yet it is bound to provide guards or signal lights to prevent persons from receiving injuries in entering a street by a commonly traveled road, although such road is in fact a private way, and has never been laid out as a highway or street. There is no duty, however, to erect barriers or maintain lights to prevent injury to persons entering a street where there is no traveled way either public or private, and nothing to put the city on notice that such entrance is likely to be attempted.”

In Elliott on Roads and Streets, vol. 2, sec. 1138, it is said:

“The right to recover, in cases of negligence, rests upon a breach of legal duty, and, where there is no duty, there is no cause of action. But it is not necessary, in *401 order to establish a legal duty, to do more than prove the facts out of which the duty springs; for, where the facts are established, the law will fix the duty. The duty is created by the law, but the facts must exist in order to give force or relevancy to the legal principles. In order to establish negligence, it must be shown that the corporation did what it ought not to have done, or omitted something that it was its duty to do.”

In City of Kingfisher v. Altizer, 13 Okla. 121, 74 Pac. 107, a bridge located within the corporate limits of the city upon a roadway traveled by the public generally, but not regularly laid out or established as a street, was out of repair; and a team driven by plaintiff became frightened at a hole therein and backed off the bridge, precipitating the plaintiff into a creek and injuring him. Plaintiff recovered, and the court, in affirming the judgment, stated:

“The evidence, also, is amply sufficient, in our opinion, to prove that the bridge was within the corporate limits of the city. And it further appears to us that there is sufficient evidence to show that the city for a number of years had exercised supervision of the bridge in question, and had recognized it as a part of the public streets of the municipality. This alone would be sufficient to require the city authorities to keep the bridge in a proper condition of repair, and for failure to do so it is liable for damages resulting from its negligence. Dillon’s Municipal Corporations (4th Ed.) vol. 2, sec. 1009.”

In Oklahoma City v. Meyers, 4 Okla. 686, 46 Pac. 552, it is said in the syllabus: .

“Where a city negligently permits an excavation to be made in such close proximity to a street as to endanger the traveling public, and a person, without fault, is injured by falling into such excavation, a recovery may be had for such injury.”

In Burnham v. City of Boston, 10 Allen, 290, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in a case very like the one at bar, in the syllabus, held:

*402

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 307, 148 P. 701, 47 Okla. 398, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-long-v-oklahoma-city-okla-1914.