Duncan v. City of Grand Rapids

99 N.W. 317, 121 Wis. 626, 1904 Wisc. LEXIS 30
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 99 N.W. 317 (Duncan v. City of Grand Rapids) 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
Duncan v. City of Grand Rapids, 99 N.W. 317, 121 Wis. 626, 1904 Wisc. LEXIS 30 (Wis. 1904).

Opinion

Dodge, J.

This case presents several questions which have been considered and disposed of in Lyon v. Grand Rapids, ante, p. 609, 99 N. W. 311; tbe counsel being identical in both cases. It will therefore be unnecessary, as to such questions, to do more than apply tbe .decision reached in that case. Those questions are:

Eirst, tbe validity of tbe appeal, taken more than eighty "days after tbe filing of tbe claim with tbe city clerk, but before any notice of its disallowance by tbe common council bad been given to plaintiff. That objection must, upon the-authority of tbe Lyon Case, be ruled against tbe appellant, and tbe action of tbe trial court in refusing to dismiss the-appeal be affirmed.

Next is tbe criticism of tbe third question of tbe special vei’dict, which was tbe same in both cases. That, too, is ruled against tbe appellant by tbe Lyon Case, and we must bold [629]*629here tbat no prejudicial error is well assigned upon that question.

Tbe charge of the court with reference to the third question contains the same information to- the jury as to the grounds of liability and the general rules of law under whicli the city may be charged, and is objectionable and prejudi-cially erroneous for the same reasons stated in the Lyon Case.

One of the most seriously argued assignments of error is based upon the contention that the defect proved was other than that alleged in the complaint and that described in the notice of injury served on the city; and upon this difference it is urged, first, that the notice was thereby misleading; and, secondly, that an amendment allowed to the complaint at the close of the trial, making the description correspond with the evidence, was erroneous. The complaint alleged the existence of a hole of the dimensions mentioned in the statement of facts, caused by the adjoining edges of two successive planks having decayed and rotted away in such manner as to leave such hole, and that the stringers were badly rotted, so as not to hold the nails. The notice ascribed the defect to the fact that two of the planks were decayed and a considerable portion thereof rotted away and broken- — so much so that an open space and hole therein existed of the said dimensions — and also that the stringers were rotted. The evidence tended to show that the walk was constructed with a longitudinal stringer in the middle, and that in the south half there was a rotting away of the adjoining edges of two boards, said rotting away being complete for two or three inches, and that on the east edge of this hole one of the boards was further splintered and broken down immediately adjoining the middle stringer, so that the hole was some eight inches wide at the widest point along the stringer, running in a triangle with the apex toward the south. It appeared, however, that this splintered and broken-down board or plank, which [630]*630wag originally two inches thick, had so rotted away underneath that there was only about half an inch of thickness not crumbled away. There was also evidence that in the north half of the walk, in about this same neighborhood, there was a hole between two planks, resulting from the rotting of adjoining edges, but without any breaking or splintering, some four or five inches wide; and some suggestion appears that other similar holes elsewhere in the walk existed. The contention is that the description of the complaint could have applied only to this hole in the north half of the walk, where there was only a rotting away and no breaking down. It will, however, be observed that the original notice and claim both mentioned the fact of the breaking down of part of one of the planks as a characteristic of the defect; hence it is apparent that the notice, instead of tending to mislead into an understanding that the injury resulted from the hole in the north half of the walk, tended directly to call attention to the distinguishing characteristic of the hole in the south half. True, the complaint differed in this respect, and it might have been held more accurately to describe a defect from which the plaintiff did not suffer, instead of the one from which she did, but we cannot think the difference at all material. A hole of the dimensions described, alleged to have been caused by the adjoining edges having decayed and rotted away, is in no wise an incorrect description of one which has been enlarged by the breaking down of the edges of the board as a result of rot and decay, although portions thereof so broken are not entirely rotted and crumbled out of existence. It does not appear that plaintiff had any knowledge of the other holes in the walk, apart from their existence, so that, though complaint might be ambiguous by reason of its possible reference to one or another defect, it cannot be ascribed to any purpose to mislead on her part. We are convinced that the description in the notice accurately applied to the defect proved by the evidence, and that the departure of the [631]*631complaint from accuracy of description was so slight as to render amendment unnecessary and therefore, if at all improper, entirely without prejudice.

Objection is made to the admission of certain evidence: First, that of one La Breche as to measurements made to ascertain the exact location of the defect several days after the injury, and after the planks had been removed and carried away hy the owner of the abutting premises. He claimed to be able to locate the place of the defect by his memory, and by observing a gathering of rotten wood on the ground, which he had also observed under this hole while the sidewalk was in place át and before the time of the injury. We think this rendered his testimony as to measurements admissible, although the uncertainty bore upon its accuracy and his credibility.

A further criticism of the testimony of this and other witnesses is that they were allowed to testify to the existence of other rotted holes in the walk, most of them of less dimensions, and also to the generally rotted condition of the stringers after the boards were removed. It was proved without dispute that the sidewalk was old and that the under side of this board in question, in common with others, was largely rotted away, leaving but a thin surface of cohesive wood. In the admission of this evidence there was no error. The defect from which plaintiff suffered was an immediate result and concomitant of a generally old, rotted, and worn condition of the sidewalk, similar to some of the other defects described, though slightly greater in degree, and just such as might naturally and reasonably be expected to develop from the worn-out and rotted condition of the whole walk. Under such circumstances, the propriety of proving the generally defective condition has been often approved, and is entirely settled. Barrett v. Hammond, 87 Wis. 654, 58 N. W. 1053; McHugh v. Minocqua, 102 Wis. 291, 18 N. W. 478.

It is claimed that the trial court should have held the [632]*632plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law, and amended tbe verdict accordingly. The evidence is sim- ■ ply that she had no previous knowledge of the existence of ''this defect or of the condition of the walk; that she passed 'over it in broad daylight, engaged in conversation with her daughter, carrying a parasol; and that she gave no particular attention to the surface of the walk, although she observed that it was a plank walk and that in places it was not solid— “was kind of teetery,” as she expressed it.

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.W. 317, 121 Wis. 626, 1904 Wisc. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-city-of-grand-rapids-wis-1904.