City of Radford v. Brooks
City of Radford v. Brooks
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant in error, Ellen M. Brooks, brought this action against the plaintiff in error, the city of Radford, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by. her in falling while walking along a defective board sidewalk on one of its streets. The accident is ascribed to the negligence of the defendant in failing to exercise ordinary 6are to keep the sidewalk in a reasonably safe condition. The defendant demurred to the plaintiff’s evidence, and brings error to the action of the trial court in overruling the demurrer and rendering judgment for the plaintiff.
I. The first assignment of error involves the ruling of
2. The second assignment of error is to the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the amended declaration, in that it alleges a higher degree of care on the part of the city in the matter of maintaining the board sidewalk than is imposed by law.
This question has quite recently received the consideration of this court in the case of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Snead’s Adm’r, 124 Va. 177, 97 S. E. 812, where it was said: “It is wholly unnecessary for B to say anything about the law of the case, or what were the respective rights and duties of the parties in the premises. This is a matter of law of which the court takes judicial notice. If the defendant wishes to contest the law upon the facts stated in the declaration, he must do so by demurrer. If he wishes to contest the fact or facts, he must do so by appropriate pleading. But the existence of the legal duty need not be stated in the declaration, and its omission does not render the declaration faulty. What must be stated are the facts out of which the legál duty arises. When these are stated, the court will apply the law arising thereon.”
3. The remaining assignment is to the court’s action in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence and rendering judgment for the damages assessed by the jury.
We find no reversible error in the judgment, and it must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
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- 1. Pleading — Declaration—Time of Filing — Dismissal by Clerk.— Section 3241, Code of 1904, provides that: “If one month elapse after the process is returned executed as to any one or more of the defendants, without the declaration or bill being filed, the clerk shall enter the suit dismissed although none of the defendants have appeared.” Held: That this means a month after the “return day” to which process is returned executed-; that is, the day to which the defendant is ordered to appear, and from that time he has one month within which to file his declaration. The time is to be computed from the “return day” and not from a day previous thereto on which the process may have been served. 2. Dismissal — Discontinuance and Non-Suit — Dismissed by Clerk. —Reinstatement by Court. — Where a ease was dismissed during vacation for want of a declaration by the clerk only twenty-one days from the return- day of process, although more than a month after the process was executed, upon a motion to reinstate at the following term, the court by authority of section 3293 of the Code of 1904 rightly took cognizance of the proceedings in the clerk’s office during the preceding vacation, and, treating the order dismissing the suit as a nullity, reinstated the case. 3. Pleading — Declaration—Matters of Law. — It is the function of the declaration to set out .facts, and not matters of law of which the court takes judicial notice. The allegation of a legal duty, though not unusual, is not essential, and if wrongly stated is not a ground of demurrer. 4. Pleading — Declaration—Erroneous Statement of the Law — demurrer to Evidence. — A demurrer to the evidence submits the case to the court on the law and the evidence, and the court’s attention can be drawn to an alleged erroneous statement of the law in the declaration; and, if the allegation affects the measure of damages, the correct practice is to instruct the jury on the subject. Streets and Highways — Liability of City for Defective Side-5. walk. — In an action against a city to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in falling while walking along a board sidewalk on one of the streets of the city, the evidence of plaintiff showed a failure on the part of the defendant to use ordinary care to keep the board walk in question in a reasonably safe condition for the use of pedestrians. Part of the sidewalk on account of its condition had been removed entirely, and at the place of the accident it was out of repair and unsafe. A number of the boards were missing, and the court was well warranted in finding that if the missing boards had been replaced the accident would not have occurred. Held: That the negligence of the city in failing to repair the sidewalk was not and could not be denied.