Ericsson v. Manchester

8 F. Cas. 753, 3 Hughes 191, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2117
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia
DecidedApril 10, 1879
DocketCase No. 4,511
StatusPublished

This text of 8 F. Cas. 753 (Ericsson v. Manchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ericsson v. Manchester, 8 F. Cas. 753, 3 Hughes 191, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2117 (circtedva 1879).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

This is an action on the case for damages, the declaration charging with the usual amplitude of allegation, among other things, that the street on which the accident occurred was a public highway of the city, that it was at the time, and had been for some time before, in unsafe condition, for the want of a proper railing or wall to protect persons passing over the arch from accident, and that the defendant had notice of its bad and defective condition, and w'ilfully neglected to make it safe. (The case was tried at the February term of the court, when a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff in w'hich his damages were assessed at $5.500.) At the trial the defendant insisted generally that á city is not liable to individuals injured for the bad condition of its streets. It insisted, moreover, that this causeway was not a public street of the city, and for that reason that the city was not liable for the accident. It insisted further that the causeway was the property of the James River Bridge Company; that it was under the bridge company’s control, and not under the control of the city, and that for that reason the cicy was not liable.

Elaborate argument, based upon very numerous authorities, was made at the trial by counsel on either side, on prayers for instructions to the jury. The court was obliged to rule upon them off-hand, and in doing so invited in advance a motion for a new trial, in order to a more deliberate argument of the [754]*754law of the case, in the event of a verdict for the plaintiff, giving to the jury the following instructions:

“There are three questions for the .jury, viz.: (1) Whether a proper guard or protection had been provided at the point where the accident to the plaintiff occurred. If. there was not, (2) whether the accident was in consequence of the absence of such proper guard or protection; and (3) if so, whether damage ensued to the plaintiff, and what amount of money shall be allowed as the measure of the damage to him. If the jury believe from the evidence that a proper guard or protection to me highway was not provided, that the accident occurred in consequence, and that damage ensued to the plaintiff from the accident, then the court instructs the jury that the city of Manchester is liable for the damages, unless it proves that the plaintiff sustained his injury through his own neglect or want of care. The jury are also instructed that in considering damages in tais case they may take into account any permanent future suffering and disability resulting to the plaintiff from the accident.”

A motion for a new trial was duly made by the defendant and the questions of law very fully reargued. The motion was, of course, based upon the ground that the court misruled at the trial on the law of the case.

1 am now to revise the ruling of the court at the trial this ease, made in the instructions given to the jury. There are three questions in the case, viz.: 1. Whether the causeway was a highway or public street of Manchester. If so, (2) wherner Manchester as a municipal corporation is liable to an individual for damages resulting to him from the defective or bad condition of its streets; and, if so, (3) whether tne relations of the .Tames River Bridge Company to this particular causeway relieved Manchester from responsibility for its defective or bad condition.

1. As to the first point, I think the causeway was in every sense a public highway; and. lying wholly witum the corporate limits of Manchester as it did, I think it was a pumic street of the city, subject to its control and authority in every way in which any other street of the city is so subject. For the purpose of building the bridge and causeway, which was a joint enterprise of the two contiguous cities, it was found convenient to make use of the instrumentality of a joint stock company; but the adoption of this meuiod of action was not intended to, and urn not, convert what was in its nature a public highway, connecting two cities, into the private property of a private company. If the two cities had designed by such an expedient to avoid the liability of keeping a public highway in safe condition, I cannot suppose that an act of incorporation for the joint stock company would ever have been given them by the legislature. This causeway is the only free highway connecting the two cities. It is essentially and necessarily a public highway, and being in the corporate limits of Manchester, is in its essential character a puolie street of that city.

Stress was laid by counsel for defendant upon that section of the charter of the city of Manchester which provides that any street which shall have been open and used by the public as a street for five years shall become a public street and be subject to the control of the council. This section has no other effect than to render the mere fact of a street being open to the use of the public for five years, ipso facto, a subjection of it to the control and power of the city. The object of the provision was to get rid of the refined learning of the law-books on the question what constitutes the dedication of a street to the public in cases where doubt exists. The numerous decisions on that subject cited at bar have no application to cases where there is no doubt about a street being used, and intended to be used, by the public, as in the case before us. Here was a street ■ necessarily public in its very nature. No formal adoption of the bridge by Richmond, or of the causeway by Manchester, was necessary to constitute them a public highway. They were constructed by public bodies, with public funds, for public use, as a public highway, and were thrown open to the public for free use at the start A formal adoption of them as a public street would, therefore, have been an idle ceremony. The use of them for five years by the public was not necessary to clear up any doubt as to their public character, and thereby to establish upon them the control and authority of the respective municipalities. I could not so falsify an evident and indisputable fact as to refuse to hold that the causeway in question is a public street of Manchester, as such subject to its control, and as to which Manchester is liable to such duties and responsibilities as the law imposes upon municipal corporations.-

2. The next question is, whether Manchester as a municipal corporation is liable for the defective or bad condition of its streets, to individuals sustaining actual injury therefrom. Only a few weeks ago the supreme court of appeals of Virginia, in the case of Noble v. City of Richmond, 31 Grat. 271, passed upon this question, and decided that: , “A municipal corporation which, by its charter, has the power to lay out, improve, light, and keep* its streets in order, is liable in damages at the suit of an individual who sustained injuries by reason of the neglect of said corporation to keep its streets in a proper and safe condition; and that such person may recover damages for such injuries in an action in which he alleges and proves that the corporation had notice of defects or want of repairs in its streets (which notice may be implied), and that he was injured in consequence of such defects in a street.” The decision was rendered in a case in which the [755]*755plaintiff’s wife had fallen into a hole in the sidewalk of a street of Richmond at night, the hole having been left uncovered and no light placed near by.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 753, 3 Hughes 191, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ericsson-v-manchester-circtedva-1879.