DocketNumber: No. 35186.
Citation Numbers: 11 So. 2d 205, 194 Miss. 162, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 168
Judges: Alexander, Anderson
Filed Date: 12/21/1942
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
An analysis of the foregoing cases should disclose that they expound a principle adherence to which required a conclusion contrary to defendant's contention. The repetition of the statement of reasonable care applicable in similar cases seems not to have been sufficient to guarantee its full comprehension. The standard of care required of a municipality in its construction or maintenance of its streets was carefully restated in City of Greenville v. Laury,
The contention here made, that since this court found that plaintiff was not himself exercising reasonable care, the city owed him no duty, was made in most of the foregoing cases, and was especially urged in Birdsong v. City of Clarksdale,
It seems that misapprehension of the rule arises from a tendency to confuse the word "persons" in the definition of the city's initial duty with the "person" who at the moment happens to be a plaintiff. The conduct of such plaintiff is not a proper subject of inquiry unless and until liability of the city has previously been adjudged by an application of the foregoing rule. This rule is an abstract statement of substantive law. The standard of duty is not merely care, it is reasonable care; and more, it is reasonable care to maintain its streets in a reasonably safe condition. But this is not yet sufficiently definite because we must have a standard of reasonable safety. Such definition must be made, and may be found in the Birdsong case, supra, where it is said, "The municipality has the right, therefore, in the construction and maintenance of its streets to act in the light of expectation that the users thereof will look to the physical aspects and the natural condition of things around them." See, also, Supreme Instruments Corp. v. Lehr,
The argument here made is that which was answered in the foregoing cases. It is this: since plaintiff was not using reasonable care the city owed him no duty under the rule set forth. This contention misconceives the rule and its acceptance would reinstate the complete bar of contributory negligence. Cf. dissenting opinion City of Greenville v. Laury, supra. The rule does not mean that the municipality is liable only to those using reasonable care. Its negligence is to be determined by its own conduct, without reference to that of plaintiff, and its liability becomes fixed when such negligence becomes the proximate cause of injury. A plaintiff's conduct is not *Page 178 a factor in adjudging the initial negligence of the city. He may be using more or less care than the standard required by the rule. If the city is negligent, and injury ensues, it is liable to the injured party, regardless of whether the latter was using reasonable care or not. As to the extent of such liability, the negligence of plaintiff becomes a relevant factor under Code 1930, sec. 511. The city's negligence is not appraised with reference to the particular plaintiff nor the particular accident; it is determined initially with reference solely to the standard of care as defined in the principle. If the city is negligent by its conduct the plaintiff's negligence becomes contributory; if the city is not negligent by the abstract test the injury is due solely to negligence of the plaintiff.
When the statement of the principle is disarranged confusion is invited. Thus it wholly destroys the import of the rule to say, as is here contended, that a municipality owes a duty to those using reasonable care and caution to exercise ordinary care to keep its streets reasonably safe. Another distortion too frequently found is that the city must exercise such care provided the plaintiff uses reasonable caution. The phrase "persons exercising reasonable care and caution" modifies, not "duty," but "safe." As stated in the Birdsong case, supra: "The expression is a brief definition of the duty of the city but does not operate as a deprivation of the right of the citizen. It sets up a standard of conduct for the city under which it may be reasonably absolved, but not a criterion by which the citizen shall be unreasonably barred."
Suggestion of error overruled. *Page 179