Pearl v. Township of Benton

82 N.W. 226, 123 Mich. 411, 1900 Mich. LEXIS 837
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 82 N.W. 226 (Pearl v. Township of Benton) 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
Pearl v. Township of Benton, 82 N.W. 226, 123 Mich. 411, 1900 Mich. LEXIS 837 (Mich. 1900).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

The plaintiff recovered a judgment against the township for an injury received from the fall of a bridge, and the defendant has appealed.

The appellees brief states that the negligence of thé township consisted in its failure to sink the mudsills of the bridge sufficiently, and that in consequence the water [412]*412washed the dirt from underneath them, and undermined the bents supporting the end of the bridge; also in neglecting to drive piles or posts to prevent the mudsills from slipping; also in neglecting to brace the structure. It was further claimed that the defendant was negligent in failing to examine the bridge for three years before the accident, and that it was chargeable with notice of its defective' condition.

The declaration is in two counts. The first alleges:

“That for more than six years previous to December 21, 1895 [the date of the accident], the defendant had constructed and attempted to maintain a certain bridge over and across a large public drain intersecting said highway, which drain was constructed and maintained by the defendant as a township drain, and that it was defendant’s duty to construct and maintain said bridge in a sound, safe, and proper condition, so that the same would at all times be staunch and strong and reasonably safe for public travel, but, neglecting its duty, it had for a long time previous thereto wholly neglected to care for, maintain, and repair said bridge, and the same had by reason of such neglect become wholly unfit and unsafe for public travel, and the supports, which had become weakened by rotting, were unfit and unsafe to remain thereunder as supports therefor,, and the soil supporting the mudsills had, by the swift current of said drain, been washed from under the mudsills by the defendant’s negligence, in this: The said defendant, by its drain commissioner's, having deepened the said drain until the mudsills of said bridge were left resting upon a narrow ridge of earth, from one foot to eighteen inches above the bottom of said drain, and defendant negligently and carelessly left said bridge in said defective and dangerous condition without placing any lateral support under it, or without bracing said bridge, and without sinking said mudsills below the bed of said drain, and without placing any precaution against the action of the running water in said drain upon the dirt under said mudsills, either by lowering said mudsills, or by driving piling or posts against said mudsills to hold •them in their places, and prevent the structure resting thereon from falling into the drain; and defendant was negligent also in this: That notwithstanding that said bridge was built upon mudsills, and without braces or [413]*413proper supports, the highway commissioners of said township, nor any of them, had made any examination of said bridge for more than three years before said date.”

The count then alleges that there was a large hole in the planking of the bridge, and the failure of the defendant to repair the bridge or render it safe, and that plaintiff drove upon the bridge, which went down, causing his injury.

The second count contained the following allegation of negligence:

“That, crossing said highway at a point twenty-five rods south of the point of intersection of said highway with the south line of said section 21, is a large township drain, known and called the ‘Stewart Drain,’ which said drain, and its numerous tributaries, carry off the surface and other waters from more than one thousand acres of land in said township, and that said drain has a continuous flow of water the year around, and has at all times a swift current, and that said drain was originally constructed by said defendant, and has since always been and is under the control and care of said defendant; and more than six years before December 21, 1895, the defendant constructed a certain bridge on said highway over and across said large drain, and plaintiff avers that the original construction of said bridge was defective, and that the same was negligently and carelessly built, in' this: That the defendant rested said large structure of more than twelve feet span on mudsills, so called, and failed to sink said sills below the-bottom of said drain, and neglected to properly brace and strengthen said bridge, and drove no piling or posts to prevent the said mudsills from slipping from their places into said drain; and said defendant afterwards, to wit, on or about the month of January, 1895,. wrongfully and negligently deepened said drain across said highway and under said bridge, until said bottoms of said mudsills were from twelve to eighteen inches above the bottom of said drain, thereby exposing the dirt under said mudsills to 'the action and encroachments of the running water in said drain; and defendant negligently left said mudsills in that dangerous condition without driving piles or posts to hold them in place, and without bracing and constructing a firm foundation for said sills, and without in any way protecting, or attempting to protect, said bridge from falling into said drain.
[414]*414“And plaintiff avers that for more than three years prior to said 21st day of December, 1895, no highway commissioner or officer of said township, or any other person on behalf of said township, made any examination whatever of said bridge and the supports thereof, wherein the plaintiff alleges the defendant was grossly negligent," and, by reason solely of the negligence of the defendant in the premises, the plaintiff received the injuries hereinafter complained of. Yet, notwithstanding it was the duty of said defendant to the plaintiff to build, repair, and maintain said bridge in a safe condition for travel and úse by the plaintiff and the public; the defendant wholly neglected its duty in the premises as aforesaid, and, by reason solely of such neglect, said bridge became dilapidated, and without supports thereunder, the mudsills having been washed away by the water in the drain, and the whole structure was in an unsafe and dangerous condition, and without knowledge on the part of plaintiff of the defective and dangerous condition of said bridge, said defendant having wrongfully and utterly neglected to place any signs or signals at or near said bridge to warn and notify the traveling public and the plaintiff that said bridge was unsafe and dangerous.”

From these counts we may deduce three grounds upon which the plaintiff seeks to recover:

1. A neglect to keep the bridge in proper repair.

2. A failure to seasonably inspect.

3. A failure to anticipate the undermining of the mud-sill when the bridge was built.

A failure to keep a bridge in a reasonably safe condition for travel is not a ground of recovery, unless knowledge or notice of the existence of the defect, and an opportunity to remedy it, is shown; and such notice is not inferable from a mere failure to seasonably inspect. Thomas v. City of Flint, ante, 10 (81 N. W. 937).

We must assume from the declaration that the bridge was weakened by an undérmining of a mudsill, made possible by the deepening of the drain after the bridge was rebuilt, in 1892. Counsel insist that the declaration shows that defective construction is complained of. It is true that the declaration says that the construction was [415]

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Related

Whitford v. Township of Washington
151 N.W. 632 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1915)
Pearl v. Township of Benton
100 N.W. 188 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.W. 226, 123 Mich. 411, 1900 Mich. LEXIS 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearl-v-township-of-benton-mich-1900.