Moeller v. City of Rugby

153 N.W. 290, 30 N.D. 438, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 146
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 153 N.W. 290 (Moeller v. City of Rugby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moeller v. City of Rugby, 153 N.W. 290, 30 N.D. 438, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 146 (N.D. 1915).

Opinion

Burke, J.

Plaintiff was awarded $800 damages for injury alleged to have been received from fall upon defective sidewalk. Defendant appeals, relying principally upon the defense of contributory negligence. Por the purposes of this appeal only, the city concedes its negligence, but alleges that plaintiff’s negligence contributed to her own injury, and therefore, under well-settled principles of law, she ought not to recover.

(1) Under the circumstances, it is necessary to examine the facts disclosed by the record, and this will be given our first consideration. Plaintiff is a married woman, rather stout, was forty-one years of age at the time of the accident, and had lived in the city of Rugby about six years. Plaintiff was living with her family of four children in a house which is designated the “west” house. She had made it a practice to visit neighboring towns to give music lessons, sometimes staying several days. About the 27th or 28th of August, 1912, she started on one of those trips, returning Saturday evening, August 31st. During her absence her two daughters had moved the household effects to another house, designated the “east” house. This new location was on the same side of the street, one block and one lot, or something like 450 feet, distant. Between the two residences was a board sidewalk in a dilapidated condition. Plaintiff had resided in the west house about two years, and had passed along said street about four times a week, coming and going, though not always on that side of the street. She had noticed the condition of the walk, and on one occasion at least had spoken to the owner of the premises in an effort to get it repaired. She says she had noticed the defects of said sidewalk many times, and that everybody in Rugby must have known about them, too. Upon the evening of the said 31st of August about 10 o’clock, plaintiff went from the new location to the old house, passing over such defective sidewalk. Upon this journey she was accompanied by one of her daughters, who took her arm and piloted her safely to the old or west [444]*444house. After looking over the house to see if everything had been moved, plaintiff took some clothes on her left arm and a framed music diploma, which she suspended over her right arm by the hanging wire, and in each of her hands she took a common tungsten electric light bulb. In this condition she started back over the Same sidewalk without the attendance of the daughter.

She testifies:
A. It was so pitch dark I could not have seen at all, if I had not carried a thing. . . .
Q. You say it was dark that night?
A. Yes, sir. It was pitch dark.
Q. Were you able to see any distance in front of you at that time?
A. I could not see a thing in front of me, — but not on account of the things I was carrying, simply on account of the darkness of the night.
Q. Now, did you know at that time of any defects in the sidewalk along there ?
A. Yes, sir. I did. I doubt if there were many people in this town that did not know it.
Q. Go on and tell the jury how you proceeded along the sidewalk, and if anything happened to you while you were proceeding along the-sidewalk.
A. I proceeded just as carefully as I could on account of the condition of the sidewalk, and dragged my feet along, but I thought this opening in the sidewalk was a little farther to the west than where it was, and it was so pitch dark I could not exactly locate the opening, and I got across the first open spot, and when I got here, of course, I was thrown into this opening on account of the darkness of the night. I could not see where I was walking. ... I was thrown suddenly and violently to tire ground, or rather I struck .across the other planks on ahead of me.
Q. What happened to the bulbs in your hands ?
A. They were smashed to innumerable pieces. . . .
Gross-examination':'
Q. How long did you know the hole in which you fell had been in. the sidewalk before you fell into it ?
[445]*445A. I can’t exactly state. I knew it was a good while. It was a good long while. It was left that way very many months.
Q. And you had noticed it time and again in passing to and fro ?
A. I had noticed it, yes, sir. I had noticed that, but there were so many others besides. . . .
Q. You are certain it was heavy clouds 1
A. I am.
Q. Extremely dark?
A. Yes, sir, dark as pitch.
Q. Threatening rain ?
A. It did look like rain, yes, sir, in my estimation. . . .
Q. Isn’t there an electric light on that street ?
A. It is so small that you can hardly see it.
Q. Isn’t there one there ?
A. It is one of the small incandescents.
Q. Isn’t there one there ?
A. Yes, sir, it wasn’t burning that night. It very seldom did burn. » . . I know that light wasn’t burning at our corner. ... It was scarcely ever burning all summer long.
Q. Wh,en did you first notice the darkness ?
A. The moment I first stepped out of my door in the new house.
Q. Did you see it (the defect in sidewalk) as you went down ?
A. I couldn’t see it. It was too dark to see anything.
Q. What did you do ? Did you go around ?
A. We tried to walk around it, but we could not walk around it because it was so muddy and slippery. . . .
Q. And there was a beaten path around the opening in the sidewalk, was there not ? ,
A. Not that I know of. . . .
Q. Just tell to the jury exactly how you got over or around that hole as you went down.
A. Well, I picked my way as carefully as I possibly could.
Q. Just state to the jury how you got over or around that hole as you went down.
A. I walked over it with the help of my daughter, just as carefully and slowly as I possibly could.
Q. You walked over it?
A. I did. ...
[446]*446Q. What did she (the daughter) say when she got to that hole ?
A. She said, “Mamma, be careful for these walks are so dreadfully bad,” so she took my arm. . . .
Q. You didn’t realize when you passed over this hole ?
A. Why, certainly.
Q. Iiow did you realize it ?
A. The effort to get across it.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.W. 290, 30 N.D. 438, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moeller-v-city-of-rugby-nd-1915.