McCool v. City of Grand Rapids

24 N.W. 631, 58 Mich. 41, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 469
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 N.W. 631 (McCool v. City of Grand Rapids) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCool v. City of Grand Rapids, 24 N.W. 631, 58 Mich. 41, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 469 (Mich. 1885).

Opinion

Champlin, J.

How. Stat. § 1443, provides that if any horse shall receive any injury or damage by reason of neglect of any city to keep in repair any public street, the city whose duty it is to keep such public street in repair shall be liable to, and shall pay the owner thereof, just damages which may be recovered in an action on the case : provided, that in all actions brought under the act imposing the liability, it must be shown that such city has had reasonable time and opportunity, after such street became unsafe or unfit for travel, to put the same in proper condition for use, and has not used reasonable diligence therein.

This action is brought to recover, under this section of the statute, damages for an injury to plaintiff’s horse, occasioned by stepping upon a stone and breaking the horse’s leg. The declaration, after averring the duty of the city of keeping its streets in repair, alleges that

the defendant, on, to wit, the 9th day of October aforesaid, and for, to wit, thirty days immediately preceding said 9th day of October at, to wit, the city of Grand Kapids aforesaid, disregarding its duty in the premises, failed to keep said Cherry street between the point where a certain other street known as South Division street intersects said Cherry street, and the point where a certain other street known as Sheldon street intersects said Cherry street at, to wit, the city of Grand Hapids aforesaid, in good repair, and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel; but said defendant did on, to wit, the 9th day of October, 1883, and for, to wit, thirty days immediately preceding, negligently allow on said Cherry street, between the points above Mentioned, a large amount of small stones, commonly called cobble-stone, to accumulate, gather and remain, and that the traveled part of said street, between the two points above mentioned, was, on said 9th day of October, and for a long time immediately preceding, to wit, thirty days, covered and full of said small stones, which rendered it reasonably unsafe and unfit to travel along and upon, and whereas said plaintiff was, on the 9th day of October, 1883, the owner and lawfully possessed in his own right of a certain horse of great value, to wit, $250, and by reason of the negligence aforesaid, and the failure of said defendant to keep said' Cherry street in a reasonably safe and fit condition for travel, while said plaintiff, by his servant and employes, was, on said 9th day of [44]*44October, 1883, without fault or negligence on the part of said plaintiff, or his said servant, driving said horse on and along said Cherry street, between the point where said South Division street intersects said Cherry street and a point’where said Sheldon street intersects said Cherry street, and by reason of the unsafe, unfit and dangerous condition of said street, and by reason of- the stones being in said street as aforesaid, and without fault or negligence on the part of said plaintiff, or his said servant and employes, said horse stepped on one of said stones in said street and was then and there injured and damaged, and one of its legs was then and there fractured and broken, and said horse was then and there made wholly worthless, and subsequently, in consequence of the injuries then and there sustained on said 9th day of October, had to be killed, and said horse was of great value, to wit, of the value of $250, and said plaintiff was obliged to and did lay out and expend divers large sums of money in endeavoring tó cure and save said horse of the injuries sustained as above set forth, to wit, the sum of one hundred dollars, to wit, at the city of Grand Rapids aforesaid, to the damage of said plaintiff, one thousand dollars, and therefore he brings suit,” etc.

The plea was the general issue. After the evidence, which is all returned in the record, was introduced, the judge of the Superior Court instructed the jury to . return a verdict for the defendant. The only exception taken is general, and is in these words: “We take an exception-to the ruling-of the court.”

The instruction of the court was proper for two reasons:

1st. Because of the contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s servant. The plaintiff was a butcher, and at the time of the injury the horse and wagon of plaintiff was being driven by his hired servant in delivering, meat to plaintiff’s customers. The negligence of which the defendant was guilty consisted, as alleged in the declaration, of allowing a. large amount of small stones, commonly called “cobble-stone,” to accumulate, gather and-remain for, to wit, thirty days preceding the accident in the street, which at that point was, covered and full of said small stones, which rendered.it reasonably unsafe and unfit to travel along' and upon, and that defendant’s servant, without fault or negli[45]*45gence, was driving plaintiffs horse along Cherry street, and by reason of said stones being in the street, the horse stepped upon one of the stones, and was then and-there injured and his leg broken.

The evidence of plaintiff showed that there were scattering stones in the street “ from the size of a goose’s egg to six inches in diameter,” and that they were plainly to be seen by a person driving along the street before they were reached from the direction the plaintiff’s servant came. Several of the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that it was unsafe to drive a horse through that portion of the street on account of the number of stones in it. One of plaintiff’s witnesses testified that “it wouldn’t be Very safe for a man to run a horse through, but it would be safe if a man should drive careful.” The plaintiff’s servant testified that he reached the stones about twenty or twenty-five feet after he left Sheldon street, and the accident occurred about fifty-five feet from Sheldon street, and that he was driving on a slow trot. If the street was in the condition described by plaintiff’s witnesses, it was certainly a careless and negligent act for the plaintiff’s servant to attempt to drive over such defects upon a trot, and it is quite clear that the accident would not have happened if the man had driven carefully. The accident happened in the day-time, and the defects were plain to be seen, and the driver does not claim that he did not see them in time to reduce the speed of his horse to a walk. Where defects are obvious in a street, such as are alleged to exist here, and a person willfully or negligently keeps on at a rapid speed and neglects to exercise that care which the circumstances require of him, and an injury is produced in consequence of such negligence, he acts at his own risk’and must suffer the consequences. Abernethy v. Van Buren Township 52 Mich. 383. Such was the case here, as disclosed by the evidence on the part of the plaintiff, and it would be unjust to hold the defendant liable for an injury caused by the reckless driving of the plaintiff’s servant.

2d. The burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show that the city had had reasonable time and opportunity, after the [46]*46street became unsafe and unfit for travel, to put it in a proper condition for use, and that it had not used reasonable diligence to do so. .

There was no attempt to show that any officer of the city had any knowledge or notice of the condition of the street. Nor does the evidence disclose at what time previous to the accident the street became unsafe or unfit for travel. What the evidence did show was that there were several loose cob ble-stone in the traveled part of the street.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.W. 631, 58 Mich. 41, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccool-v-city-of-grand-rapids-mich-1885.