Jewhurst v. . City of Syracuse

15 N.E. 409, 108 N.Y. 303, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 623, 63 Sickels 303, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 586
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 7, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 15 N.E. 409 (Jewhurst v. . City of Syracuse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jewhurst v. . City of Syracuse, 15 N.E. 409, 108 N.Y. 303, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 623, 63 Sickels 303, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 586 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The place where the accident occurred was outside of the actual limits of Tallman street. That street had been legally opened for some years of the width of sixty feet, and the accident happened two or three feet north of its northern boundary, the street running east and west. There had never been any such dedication and acceptance, on the part of the owners and the city authorities of that portion of land where the accident happened, as to make it any portion of the public street over which the city had jurisdiction. It had not built the sidewalk or any portion thereof, and never assiuned jurisdiction over this piece of land. The city had no legal right through its officers to go upon the premises where the accident happened, for it did not own the same.

*306 Under these circumstances we think it clear that the city cannot be held to any liability for the condition of the sidewalk outside of the line of the street, founded upon any duty to repair such sidewalk, for as it did not build it, never assumed control over it,' did not own and had no legal right to go upon the land where the plank lay, such duty to repair or liability for neglect to repair does not exist. (Carpenter v. City of Cohoes, 81 N. Y. 21; Veeder v. Village of Little Falls, 100 id. 343.)

Nor is there anything in the case of Beck v. Carter (68 N. Y. 283), which aids the plaintiff. In that case defendant’s testator had made an excavation about ten feet from the line of an alley which, finder the facts in that case, the court held was to be considered as part of the public highway, and the plaintiff passing along the alley on a dark night fell into the excavation and was injured. The defendant was held liable for making an excavation so near to the highway as to make its use dangerous to one while exercising ordinary care. The action was against the person who made the excavation and not against the municipalty.

The case is also unlike that of Sewell v. City of Cohoes, (75 N. Y. 45). The officers of the city had in that case treated a piece of land within the city limits as a public street, and under and in pursuance of a resolution of the common council which fixed the grade, the land had been graded and paved as a street by the city authorities, and was used and traveled over as a public highway. The land had been in fact actually appropriated by the city and it had assumed the burden and duty of keeping it in a safe condition like any other of the public streets of the city. The court held that under such circumstances the city was estopped from setting up a lack of title to the street, or that it was not a legal highway.

But there is a class of cases, of which Cogswell v. Inhabitants of Lexington (4 Cush. 307), Hayden v. Attleborough (7 Gray, 338), Alger v. City of Lowell (3 Allen, 405), and a number of others are examples, where a city has been held hable for a failure to guard the boundary of a street under *307 •circumstances which rendered the roadway dangerous on account of such failure. They are mostly cases where the injuries were received outside of the legal limits of the highway, but at a spot which was apparently within such limits and which was rendered dangerous by an obstruction or an excavation, and no step had been taken to guard the traveler 'from running against or into it while passing along what seemed to be the highway, and in the exercise of reasonable care and caution. Thus in the first of the above cases plaintiff was traveling in the evening along the highway, the line of which was not indicated by any visible objects and the post which occasioned the injury was outside of, yet near the true line of the highway, and within the limits of the general course and direction of the travel, and where travelers were accustomed to pass, and rendered the traveling dangerous. The court held the defendant liable even if it had no right to •enter upon the land where the post was to remove it, because it clearly had the right and it was its duty, if it could not lawfully remove the post, to place such a fence or other barrier between it and the road as would have rendered the road .safe.

So in the case of Hayden v. Attleborough (supra), where the limits of the higway were not indicated by any visible objects and there was nothing to show a person driving thereon in the evening that the course he was pursuing was not within the way intended for public travel, the defendant was held liable for an injury caused to the plaintiff by being thrown from a wagon at night into a cellar which had been dug two years before, although the cellar was outside of the limits of the road, and the plaintiff at the time of the accident was outside of such limits. But there was evidence that the owner of the land, at the place of the accident, had some years before thrown it open for travel and set back his fence, and such space so thrown open was as smooth as the highway and in good order to-travel upon with horses and carriages, and before the digging of the cellar much of the travel had been accustomed to pass over the place where the cellar was dug. *308 The court charged the jury that if the line of the highway was not indicated by any visible objects, such as fences, banks-of earth or other objects, and if there was nothing to show the plaintiff in the evening that the route she was pursuing was not within the way intended for public travel, and if within the general course and direction of the travel, where travelers were accustomed to pass along the said highway, the cellar was so situated within the limits of the highway as to render the traveling there dangerous, or without the limits of the-located way, but so near as to render the travel there dangerous in the condition in which it was at the time of the accident, and there was nothing to indicate to travelers their-approach to the cellar until too late, etc., then after proper-notice the town would be liable. This charge was approved, by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, which held that the-want of a railing necessary to the security of travelers made a highway “ deficient ” within the meaning of the statute. The court was requested to charge that if the plaintiff whiles traveling out of the road-bed (there being a proper and sufficient road-bed there), met with the accident at a point off the road-bed, and without the located way, then the defendants-were not hable. This was refused and defendants took an exception which was overruled by the Supreme Court.

We have not had our attention called to any case in this-state precisely similar in its facts, but the principle of several of the cases decided here sustains this result. Thus in Saulsbury v. Village of Ithaca (94 N. Y. 27), although the village authorities had not built the plank-walk and had not even decided that a sidewalk should be built there, yet the court held that the duty rested upon the village to keep a, reasonably safe highway, and if the sidewalk were dangerous, no matter by whom built, the village owed a duty to the public to take such steps in the matter as would remove the--danger.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.E. 409, 108 N.Y. 303, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 623, 63 Sickels 303, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewhurst-v-city-of-syracuse-ny-1888.