Wood v. City of Omaha

127 N.W. 174, 87 Neb. 213, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 225
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1910
DocketNo. 15,968
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 N.W. 174 (Wood v. City of Omaha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. City of Omaha, 127 N.W. 174, 87 Neb. 213, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 225 (Neb. 1910).

Opinion

Sedgwick, J.

In 1904 Mrs, Mary A. Eddy accidentally fell on the walk on a public street in the city of Omaha and was severely injured, so that afterwards as a result of this injury, as it is alleged in the petition, Mrs. Eddy died. The plaintiff, as the administrator of her estate, brought this action against the city to recover damages. From the judgment in his favor in the district court the city has appealed. •

1. The first controverted matter relates to the character of the alleged defect in the walk. The plaintiff contends that the entire walk along the south side of Harney street from Forty-second to Forty-third street was defective and dangerous. This action, he says, was begun and he presents the case , upon that theory. The brief of the defendant presents a case in which the contention relates to a particular point in. the walk. Was there a [215]*215broken or loose plank where the Occident occurred? Did the city have due notice of the defect and proper opportunity to remedy it? It is from this point of view that the defendant’s case has been investigated and 'is now presented. Neither view seems to be definitely presented by the pleadings. The allegations of the petition would seem in some degree at least to justify defendant’s theory of the issues being controverted. After the general allegation that the walk from Eorty-second to Forty-third street was defective and dangerous, and that defendant liad knowledge of its condition for more than ten days before the injury, it is alleged that the deceased stepped upon a board which was “unavoidably tilted up by her son’s stepping on a loose board of such sidewi lk which was broken between the stringers, * * * and said particular board would have been discovered to be so broken and would have been replaced and repaired if the said generally defective sidewalk had been repaired.” The defendant now contends that the allegation is that the broken board caused the injury, and that there is no evidence that the city had notice of this defect. Construing the petition, as the law requires, more strictly against the pleader, there would be ground for defendant’s contention if it had been timely presented to the court. There was no motion to make the petition more definite and certain. The answer, so far as it relates to this contention, was a general denial. The plaintiff by his first witness introduced evidence tending to show the defective condition of the entire walk from Forty-second to Forty-third street. This evidence was received without objection, and was thoroughly canvassed by defendant upon cross-examination. It may therefore be considered that this case was tried in the district court upon the plaintiff’s contention that this entire block of‘the walk in question was in a dangerous condition.

The witness above referred to lived on Harney street between Forty-second and Forty-third streets and had lived in Omaha for 15 years. At the time of the accident [216]*216the deceased and her son were living at the house of this witness. He testified that he knew the condition of the walk thoroughly and that it was “exceedingly poor from Forty-second to Forty-third street”; that at different places the stringers had rotted away, leaving the boards practically, without proper support; that the boards themselves were not sound; that many of . them were rotted in places, and there was not one of these boards, if supported at each end, “but what would have broken in the middle if you stepped on it,” and that this was the general condition of the entire walk, and that about two weeks before the accident he went to the city hall and notified Mr. Cobum at the city office of the condition of the walk between Forty-second and Forty-third streets; that Mr. Coburn had charge of the sidewalk, and then promised the witness to see that it was put in shape. There is other evidence of the same, general nature in the record, and, if believed by the jury, would abundantly establish the negligence of the city in allowing the walk for an entire block upon a prominent street to become and remain in such a condition. Upon the trial of such an issue as this, the contention of the defendant that the city was not notified that the particular plank that caused the accident was loose or broken would be without merit. It is not at all analogous to Nothdurft v. City of Lincoln, 66 Neb. 434, and similar cases, in which it was complained that a certain plank or planks had become loose or defective.

2. The next error asserted and particularly assigned in the brief as the statute requires is that the court erred in admitting in evidence certain exhibits, numbered 2 and 4. These were notices by the board of public works of the city to certain property owners, notifying them that the sidewalk in front of their respective premises on the south side of Harney street was defective and in a dangerous condition, and requiring them to repair the same or construct a new walk in place thereof. These notices were served in the preceding year. No. 2 specified [217]*217the sidewalk between Forty-second and Forty-fourth streets, and No. 4 the walk “west of 42d street.” The objection to these exhibits was that they failed to specify the particular spot at which the accident occurred. These notices tend to show that the city authorities had knowledge of the condition of this walk from Forty-second to Forty-third streets, which was, as we have seen, the principal matter under controversy, and we think that they were properly received in evidence. Other similar objections are unavailable for the same reasons.

3. It is also contended in the brief that “the city had no notice and was not chargeable with knowledge of the alleged decayed, condition of the stringers at the place where the accident occurred.” This objection is partly predicated upon the contention that the inquiry should be confined to the particular point where the accident occurred. This phase of the objection has already been sufficiently answered. The remaining argument upon this point appears to relate to the sufficiency of the evidence to establish notice to the city, but the evidence amply justified the finding of the jury in that regard.

4. The defendant complains of instruction No. 6, given by the court, which is as follows: “Under its charter and under the law, it is the duty of the defendant to exercise ordinary care to keep its sidewalks, including the one in question, in a reasonably safe condition for use in the ordinary modes used by pedestrians, and it is liable to the plaintiff for any damages, if any were sustained by him, by reason of the death of Mary A. Eddy resulting from the negligence of the defendant to perform that duty, unless you find that said Mary A. Eddy was guilty of negligence directly contributing to said injury, and provided further that the city had notice of the unsafe condition of the sidewalk in question at the time of the injury.”

It is the last sentence of the instruction that is objected to. This expression, if taken alone, would undoubtedly be erroneous. Notice to the city at the time of [218]*218the injury Avould not he sufficient. There should be such notice as Avould have given the city opportunity to repair the defect before the injury occurred. However, the language complained of is substantially derived from the second instruction requested by the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 N.W. 174, 87 Neb. 213, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-city-of-omaha-neb-1910.