Stauffacher v. Town of Sylvester
Stauffacher v. Town of Sylvester
Opinion of the Court
Tbis is an appeal from an order overruling a demurrer to the complaint in an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by reason of a defect in the public highway October 13, 1899. In addition to allegations of a formal character, and the giving of the requisite statutory notices, and the disallowance of the plaintiff’s claim for damages, the complaint alleges, in effect, that at a point in the highway, described, about thirteen feet north of a cezfain bridge thereon, there was on the day mentioned, and had been for a long time previous thereto, a ditch or gully, four or five feet deep, close up to, and partially under, the traveled track, on the east side thereof, and which on the day mentioned was obscured from view by the presence of a rank growth of weeds; that the insufficiency and want of repair and the gully or ditch had existed previous to the day mentioned for at least three months, and were well known to the town; its supervisors, and the overseer of the road district in which the highway at that place was situated, and through their negligence, and failure to repair the same by the construction of culverts for the passage of the surface water, and the erection of barriers along the east side of the traveled track of the highway near the gully, constituted and were a dangerous defect therein; that on the day named the plaintiff was traveling along the highway in a northerly direction, and at the time was riding on the rear end of a steam thresher engine, which he then and there was assisting in propelling along the highway, and was then and there in the exercise of due care and diligence, and when the right hind wheel of the engine, which was then and there in the traveled track of the highway, came opposite the gully or ditch at that point, the ground underneath and to the east of the hind wheel of the engine broke away, by reason entirely of insufficiency- and want of repair of the highway at that plaee, and the engine and the plaintiff, in consequence thereof, and in consequence wholly of the insuffi
Counsel for the defendant contends that it appears from the facts alleged that the highway was sufficient for ordinary travel, and that the defendant was not bound to provide a highway which would support the great and extraordinary weight of a steam thresher engine, like the one in question.
But there is nothing in the complaint to warrant an inference that the injury was the result of the breaking down of a reasonably safe highway. “A ditch or gully four or five feet deep, close up to, and partially under, the traveled track, on the east side thereof, . . . obscured from view by the presence of a rank growth of weeds,” was certainly a very serious defect in the highway. -The allegation is that when the hind wheel of the “engine, which was then and there on the traveled track,” came opposite the gully or ditch, “the ground underneath and to the east of the hind wheel” broke away, by reason entirely of the insufficiency and want of repair of the highway at that place, and' that there were no guards or barriers. This court has held that an excavation two feet deep, and only two feet from the traveled track, without being guarded, might be held to be defective, as a matter of law. Seymer v. Lake, 66 Wis. 651. See Hein v. Fairchild, 87 Wis. 258; Prahl v. Waupaca, 109 Wis. 299. Such ruling is in harmony with a Massachusetts case cited by counsel for the defendant. Hinckley v. Barnstable, 109 Mass. 126. In another case in that state, cited by counsel for the defendant, it is held that “a town is liable for an injury occasioned by a defect in a highway, which the town is bound
By the Gourt. — The order of the circuit count is affirmed.
Reference
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