Mosier v. Board of County Commissioners
Mosier v. Board of County Commissioners
Opinion of the Court
Daniel Mosier was injured while driving in a buggy across a bridge. He brought action against the county. A demurrer to his evidence was sustained, but the ruling was reversed on appeal. (Mosier v. Butler County, 82 Kan. 708, 109 Pac. 162.) A second trial resulted in a judgment in his favor, from which the county appeals.
Complaint is made of the overruling of a motion, to make the petition more definite. The trial court has considerable discretion in passing upon such matters. If the petition was more general in its terms than might be desired, the plaintiff’s contentions were necessarily developed at the first trial, so that on the second hearing the defendant can not have been seriously misled.
The plaintiff had driven across the bridge proper and was upon the approach, when his horse took fright at a rock in the road, and backed the buggy against a guard rail, which gave way. The buggy, with its occupants, fell to the ground, a distance of about twenty feet.
Among other contentions made by the defendant are the following: (1) the statute imposes an express duty on townships to maintain guard rails on certain bridges, but has no such provision concerning counties; therefore thé county can not be held liable by reason of a defective guard rail; (2) the chairman of the board of county commissioners did not have notice of the defect; (3) the defect was not the proximate cause of the injury; (4) the approach was not a part of the bridge, and therefore the county was not liable for a defect in the guard rail. These matters were all necessarily involved in the former appeal, and were there passed on.
The defendant maintains that the question whether the approach was a part of the bridge should have been submitted to the jury. A line of decisions in Iowa sup
The defendant also maintains that the county is not liable because, although it built the bridge proper, and undertook to keep it in repair, it had nothing to do with the approach, and was charged with no duty in that regard, the township having exclusive control of it. The •evidence showed that the county furnished $2000 in 1882, which was used in the construction of the bridge. The next year it furnished an additional amount of $600 or $700, which was used in its completion. The bridge commissioner who had the matter in charge testified with regard to the approach:
“I superintended the building of the bridge. The approach at the west end was either poor and did not amount to anything as did that west, and the approach in question at the east end of the bridge — there was not enough money to build it and what it lacked was donated by citizens that lived around there. We donated the work. For instance, Mr. Cupp gave the timber. They made the bent in the center of the bridge and we neighbors hauled it in there and I paid the carpenters for framing it from the township, and I used what money there was remaining from the construction of the main bridge in paying the balance.”
It thus appears that the county contributed something to the building of the approach, individuals and the township making up the remainder. Notwith
Complaint is made with regard to the instructions, but we think most of the questions presented in that connection are involved in what has already been said, and that the remainder do not require separate discussion.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Daniel Mosier v. The Board of County Commissioners of the County of Butler
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. County Bridge — When Approaches thereto are Part of Bridge. Although the question whether an approach constitutes a part of a bridge may at times'be one of fact, to be submitted to the jury, in some circumstances it becomes one of law, to be declared by the court. 2. Same — Jointly Constructed — Defective Approach — Personal Injuries — County Liable. By virtue of the .statute making the county liable for injuries caused by defects in a bridge wholly or partially constructed by it, it may be held for damages occasioned by a defect, in the portion of a bridge built by a township, where the other portion was built by the county.