Merwin v. City of Utica

172 A.D. 51, 158 N.Y.S. 257, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10357
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 172 A.D. 51 (Merwin v. City of Utica) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merwin v. City of Utica, 172 A.D. 51, 158 N.Y.S. 257, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10357 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Lambert, J.:

Plaintiff sustained the injuries for which she has had judgment while walking southerly on Albany street in the city of Utica in the evening of March 25, 1913. Upon that occasion she caught her foot upon an irregularity of the sidewalk and was thrown to the ground. This irregularity was occasioned through a failure to have a concrete sidewalk laid at the same level that was á flag stonewalk to which it joined. The difference in the level at the place of accident was some three and a half inches.

[52]*52The appeal presents, among other questions, that of the sufficiency of the evidence of negligence of the defendant. In this connection it is urged that the defect shown in the walk was of so slight and trivial a character as to be wholly insufficient to support a recovery. It is true that there have been many decisions of our courts denying recovery upon the trivial character of a defect in the street complained of. And in some of such, by actual measurement, the defect seems to have been even greater than in this case. (Hamilton v. City of Buffalo, 173 N. Y. 72; Butler v. Village of Oxford, 186 id. 444; Moroney v. City of New York, 117 App. Div. 843.)

But in this class of litigations each case must stand upon its own particular facts. And, it appearing in this action that the accident happened in the evening when it was dark and rainy, and when the place of the accident was poorly lighted by reason of the failure of an electric light located nearby, we are not justified in holding that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence upon the issue of the negligence of the defendant.

However, there are more serious questions involved. By section 244 of the Second Class Cities Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 53; Laws of 1909, chap. 55) the plaintiff was required to present to the common council and serve upon the mayor or city clerk a written notice of the claim within three months from the time of the happening of the accident; and likewise and within the time therein prescribed to serve upon the corporation counsel a notice of intention to commence action upon the claim.

There seems to be no dispute but that the appropriate notice was given the common council and the mayor. There never was any attempt to serve a written notice upon the corporation counsel.

The original complaint in this action was silent, in its allegations, as to service of notice upon the corporation counsel. Later, the corporation counsel directed the attention of plaintiff’s attorneys to the defect in the complaint in that particular, and an amended complaint was served, alleging specifically the service of such a notice upon the corporation counsel.

Upon the trial no effort was made to prove the service of such a notice, and it seems to have been then substantially [53]*53conceded that none was served. The efforts of the plaintiff, as to that phase of the case, were directed to showing an express waiver, by the corporation counsel, of the service of such a notice.

All plaintiff’s evidence in that particular was received over the objection and exception of the defendant, and by appropriate motions and exceptions at the close of the plaintiff’s case, and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendant has carefully preserved this question.

The jury verdict must be construed as a finding, upon conflicting evidence, of an attempt upon the part of the corporation counsel to waive the service of the notice upon him, and, so far as the proofs are concerned, if the corporation counsel had power to make that waiver in behalf of the defendant, then the verdict must stand.

So far as is disclosed by a somewhat extensive examination by court and counsel, the Court of Appeals has not passed directly upon the question of the power of the corporation counsel to waive the service of the notice provided to be given by this statute.

There have been several decisions of the lower courts thereon, but these are somewhat conflicting.

In Winter v. City of Niagara Falls (190 N. Y. 198, 205) there was involved the question of service of a notice upon the common council of the city. The Court of Appeals there held that the corporate body only, as represented in the common council, could waive, if anybody could waive, and that court there distinctly avoided passing upon the power of the common council to make such waiver.

In Hamilton v. City of Buffalo (55 App. Div. 423) this court, by a vote of three to two, distinctly held that the corporation counsel could waive the service of the notice provided for in the above statute. Mr. Justice Spring wrote the prevailing opinion in that case and based his conclusions upon the theory that the provision for the service of such a notice in the statutes there involved, which was similar to the provision of this statute for the service of such a notice, was merely a question of procedure, created wholly for the benefit of the legal department of the city, and that, hence, it could be waived by that depart[54]*54ment. That case was later reversed (in 173 N. Y. 72) by a divided Court of Appeals. The prevailing opinion upon such latter appeal does not pass upon the question of waiver at all. The dissenting opinion, concurred in by two judges, approves the conclusions as to the waiver reached by a majority of the Appellate Division.

In Borst v. Town of Sharon (24 App. Div. 599) it was held that town and municipal officers had only such powers as were expressly conferred upon them by law and such implied powers as were necessary to enable them to exercise the expressly conferred powers and to discharge the duties expressly devolved upon them, and that, hence, no such officer had power to waive any requirement of the statute enacted for the protection of the people of the town or municipality of which he was an officer.

The doctrine of this last case is reiterated in Sheehy v. City of New York (29 App. Div. 263). This case involved the service of just such a notice as is involved in the case at bar. It was there expressly held that no official could waive the requirements of such a statute, since that requirement stood at the threshold of the action as an essential condition to its maintenance. It is true that this latter case was reversed (160 N. Y. 139), but such reversal was upon other grounds.

The same doctrine was again held in MacDonald v. City of New York (42 App. Div. 263).

This statute is quite evidently in protection of and inures to the benefit of the taxpayers and inhabitants making up the municipality. The liability of the municipality for injuries sustained upon its streets is wholly statutory, and hence the courts are not much concerned with the reason underlying the legislative enactments. The Legislature had power, in creating the liability, to hedge it about with such conditions and restrictions as it saw fit. In this instance it had expressly declared that the action shall not be maintainable unless this notice is served upon the corporation counsel. • There is no logic in permitting an official, designated by the statute as the recipient of such a notice, to aid in the creation of a cause of action against a municipality of which he is a servant, by waiving an express provision of the law.

[55]

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Bluebook (online)
172 A.D. 51, 158 N.Y.S. 257, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merwin-v-city-of-utica-nyappdiv-1916.