Court Opinion

ID: 7934417
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:07:58.263828+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:29.133166
License: Public Domain

Sherwood, C. J.
The plaintiff in this case brought, her suit against the city of Alpena to recover for an injury received by being thrown from a wagon which collided with a stump standing so near the traveled part, of Chisholm street in said city as'to make traveling by it in the night-time dangerous, and which street it was the duty of the city to keep and maintain in a reasonably safe condition for traveling with vehicles at that time. She claims the city negligently failed to discharge such duty, and by reason thereof she was injured, and without any fault on her part. On the trial in the *167circuit the plaintiff recovered a verdict of $500. The city brings error.
The record, as presented, shows that Chisholm street is one of the largely traveled thoroughfares in the city; that the plaintiff, on November 24, 1887, and about 10 o'clock in the evening, was passing over said street with a horse and buggy driven by a Mr. Wentworth. The night was dark and stormy; and, when they came to the place where the stump stood it was struck by the carriage with such force as to throw both plaintiff and Mr. Wentworth out upon the ground, she ■ striking upon her head and shoulders, in such manner as to cause serious injury to her shoulder and arm, and from which she has not yet been able to recover. It is for this injury to her person that she now brings her action. The stump was a large one, about four feet high and two to three feet through, and had stood where it did for more than ten years immediately preceding the accident; and the principal question in the case was whether it stood so near the road in the highway as to make it dangerous to travel in the night-time, when it was dark.-
It is contended by defendant's counsel that the stump was not such a defect as is contemplated by our statute1 in requiring cities to keep streets in a reasonably safe condition for travel; that the existence of the stump in the highway where it stood, if a defect or obstruction at all, was one pertaining to the construction of the road, which was not covered by the statute. In this position, I think counsel for the defendant are incorrect. The statute applies to defects in construction as well as to neglect to repair when the road is unsafe; and such has been the previous ruling of this Court (Carver v. Plankroad Co., 61 Mich. 590, 28 N. W. Rep. 721), and that the safety required by the statute is secured to travelers *168as well by nigbt as by day, and tbe dangers surrounding tbe traveler in the darkness' of night are conditions that should be taken into consideration by the authorities whose duty it is to construct and keep in repair the roadway. It is the road-way that the statute requires to be kept in a reasonably safe condition; and whether such way requires the use of the entire width of the street must depend entirely upon the necessities of travel in any given case, and of this the authorities of a township or a city must take notice, at their peril.
There was some considerable conflict in the testimony of the witnesses as to the particular location of the stump, and the proximity of the road-way thereto. The question of its location and that of the way, and its dangerous condition, were submitted to the jury, under proper instructions from the court, and the jury found for the plaintiff; and I find nothing in the record requiring a different conclusion, and the judgment should be affirmed.
The other Justices concurred.

 Laws of 1887, Act No. 264.