Mayor & Council of Wilmington v. Vandegrift

15 Del. 5
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Del. 5 (Mayor & Council of Wilmington v. Vandegrift) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor & Council of Wilmington v. Vandegrift, 15 Del. 5 (Del. 1893).

Opinion

Wolcott, Chancellor,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action on the case, instituted in the court below against the Alayor and Council of Wilmington (a corporation ex[11]*11isting under the laws of the State of Delaware) by Joseph W. Vandegrift, to recover damages for injuries received while walking along French street, in the city of Wilmington, at or near its intersection with Seventh street. It is alleged in the declaration that the plaintiff in error wilfully and negligently suffered boys and other persons to frequently use said Seventh street for the purpose of sledding and coasting thereon in an unlawful and improper manner, and that, by reason of such allowance of such unlawful use of said Seventh street, the defendant in error, while lawfully walking along French street, at or near its intersection with said Seventh street, was run into and knocked down by a sled propelled by the weight of one Joseph McHugh and thereby seriously injured. Wherefore he claimed large damages. To the declaration the plaintiff in error demurred generally, and, in accordance with act of the assembly in that behalf, specified divers causes of demurrer to the said declaration and the several counts thereof. The Court overruled the demurrer and rendered judgment in favor of the defendant in error. Thereupon the plaintiff in error brought the case to this court to be reviewed on writ of error. The judgment was assigned as error.

For the purposes of this case it is unnecessary to notice separately the several counts in which the cause of action is variously described. It is sufficient to state that the declaration contains a circumstantial statement of the injuries complained of and a distinct averment that they were the result of the wilfull negligence of the plaintiff in error. The demurrer admits all the facts set forth in the declaration that are properly pleaded to be true. The only question, therefore, with which this Court can deal, is whether those facts, in law, constitute a sufficient ground of action. To determine this question it, is necessary to ascertain what the duties and powers of the plaintiff in error were in respect to the prevention and suppression of the practice of coasting on the streets of Wilmington, or such other unlawful use thereof as would interfere with or render unsafe public travel. This will necessarily involve [12]*12the duty of making a critical examination of those provisions of the city charter relating to that subject and the regulations established by the city authorities in that behalf. While this court, sitting as a court of errors, cannot go outside of the record for any facts upon which to rest its judgment, yet we think notwithstanding the allegation of actionable negligence and the admission made by the demurrer, that the act of assembly from which the plaintiff in error derives its existence, and the ordinances enacted in pursuance thereof, are as much the subjects of legitimate inquiry as if they were literally incorporated in the pleadings before us. The averment that the accident complained of was the result of a wilful disregard of a corporate duty was more in the nature of a conclusion of law than a bare statement of fact; and consequently the demurrant is concluded by the admission made by the demurrer, only so far as such averment is sustained or supported by the law of its being, and the principles which underlie the duties and liabilities of municipal corporations. To decide the question presented by the record in this case independently of the charter of the municipality of Wilmington and the ordinances, would limit the scope of our inquiry to the consideration merely of the regularity of the pleadings, and thus leave untouched the real essence of the controversy and subject the parties to the necessity of pursuing their rights in the court below according to the course of law in that jurisdiction prescribed. While general principles are always of great assistance in determining the liabilities of a municipal corporation in civil actions for private injuries, yet the terms •employed by the Legislature to convey or impart its powers are of first importance in ascertaining its duties and corresponding liabilities.

The counsel for the defendant in error assumed in his argument that the practice of coasting on Seventh street, as alleged in the declaration, was a public nuisance and contended with much force that the plaintiff in error was liable for the damages thereby sustained by his client, because no steps were taken by it, through [13]*13the agency of the street and sewer department pursuant to the-authority given to define and remove nuisances in Section 31 of its-charter, to declare such practice to be a nuisance and prohibit the-continuance thereof, after its dangerous character had been brought to its knowledge. Now, let us see whether this contention is met or satisfied by any of the privisions of said charter. By Section 14-of the charter a municipal court is created, and by Section 15 its-jurisdiction is limited and defined. By the latter section it is given “ sole and exclusive jurisdiction to inquire of, hear, try and finally determine all those criminal matters and offences enumerated in the fifteenth section of the sixth article of the amended constitution and committed within said city and to punish all persons convicted of said offences or any of them agreeably to the laws of this State.” The fifteenth section of the sixth article of the constitution, referred to confers upon the general assembly of this State-power to establish inferior courts and clothe them with jurisdiction of certain criminal matters, and among them are enumerated nuisances. It is, therefore, clear that the Municipal Court of the city of Wilmington had jurisdiction of public nuisances as it is an inferior court established by the General Assembly of this State pursuant to the section and article of the constitution before referred to. Was the practice of coasting, as set forth in the declaration, such a nuisance as was contemplated by the framers of the constitution ? We have no doubt that it was, for it answers to and contains all the elements necessary to constitute a nuisance indiotaable at common law, and punishable under the laws of this State. A learned writer on the subject defines a common or public nuisance “ to be an unlawful act or omissson to discharge a legal duty, which act or omission endangers the lives, safety, health or comfort of the public, or by which the public are obstructed in the exercise or enjoyment of a right common to all.” Seventh street is a well-known public highway in the city of Wilmington, and for purposes of travel the people had a right to the free and uninterrupted use thereof. The occupation of said street by persons indulging in the-[14]*14sport of coasting, as described in the declaration, was unlawful, independently of any ordinance, and certainly endangered the lives and safety of the people and constituted a serious obstruction of the public in the exercise or enjoyment of a common right. It was therefore a common nuisance and clearly within the definition quoted. The Municipal Court, it will be observed, is clothed with full power to punish persons convicted of such an offence, agreeably to the laws of this State. What is that punishment ? The eighteenth section of Chapter 127 of the Revised Code provides that il

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Bluebook (online)
15 Del. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-council-of-wilmington-v-vandegrift-del-1893.