Smith v. City of Preston
Citation | 543 P.2d 848,97 Idaho 295 |
Decision Date | 09 October 1975 |
Docket Number | No. 11852,11852 |
Parties | Don C. SMITH, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CITY OF PRESTON, a Municipal Corporation, Defendant-Respondent. |
Court | United States State Supreme Court of Idaho |
Vern E. Herzog, Jr., of Anderson & Herzog, Pocatello, for plaintiff-appellant.
W. Marcus W. Nye, of Racine, Huntley & Olson, Pocatello, for defendant-respondent.
On September 27, 1973, plaintiff-appellant, Don C. Smith, (hereinafter appellant) sustained personal injuries and damage to his vehicle in an automobile accident at an intersection in the City of Preston, Idaho. The record discloses that appellant was travelling in an easterly direction on First East Street when he collided with another vehicle which was proceeding in a southerly direction on Second South Street. A stop sign existed on the southwest corner of the intersection of First East Street and Second South Street for the purpose of favoring the uninterrupted flow of northsouthbound traffic on Second South Street. Appellant, without stopping entered the intersection at a rate of speed of approximately 15 miles per hour and was struck on the left side by a southbound vehicle. Appellant claimed he did not see the stop sign because it was poorly constructed, and obstructed by branches from an overhanging willow tree. He further claimed that his view of the intersection was obstructed by a large hedge on the northwest corner. Appellant had never driven on this roadway prior to the time of the accident.
An investigating officer, Officer Bert Gailey, arrived on the scene shortly after the accident occurred. After issuing a citation to appellant for failure to yield to a stop sign, he conducted an experiment to determine the visibility of the stop sign. Officer Gailey retraced appellant's course of travel in his patrol car and stopped at a point where he could clearly see the stop sign. The distance from where he stopped his patrol car to the sign was measured to be 69 feet. Officer Gailey also stated in his deposition that the stop sign was visible approximately 30 feet earlier or roughly 100 feet from the sign. For the rest of the block (approximately 350 feet) the sign was not visible at all.
Appellant's daughter testified in her deposition that the following colloquy took place between Officer Gailey and herself at the police station, in the evening after the accident.
'. . . and then this police officer stepped forward and said, 'I am Officer Gailey.' I said, 'What is it that we need to do?' and he said, 'I feel so bad about this accident,' and I said, 'So do I,' and he said, 'I went right down that street and your father could not see that sign,' and he said, 'There is a shrub on one side and then there is trees hanging down over the stop sign.' He said, I thought he said two years, but, anyway, a long time, 'to take care of this situation, and now maybe they will do something.' I said, 'Well, then, what's the problem if it wasn't his fault?' and he said 'Well, I still have to issue him a citation.'
Appellant brought this action against defendant-respondent City of Preston (hereinafter respondent) alleging that respondent was negligent as a matter of law in its construction and maintenance of the stop sign; that as a direct and proximate result of this negligence he was unable to see the stop sign; and therefore he entered the intersection improperly and was injured. Respondent denied any actionable negligence, and further asserted that the accident was caused by the negligence of appellant, which was equal to or greater than any negligence on its part. Respondent filed a motion for summary judgment which was granted. The trial court in granting the motion ruled that:
(1) the construction of the stop sign while negligent per se because it did not comply with the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways, was not the proximate cause of the accident and
(2) appellant's negligence or culpability was greater than that of respondent.
It is from the granting of respondent's motion for summary judgment that appellant brings this appeal. We reverse.
In Straley v. Idaho Nuclear Corporation, 1 this Court summarized the fundamental principles involved and general guidelines to be followed in determining the propriety of an order granting summary judgment:
2 Upon a careful review of the record, and keeping in mind the applicable standards, we conclude that the order granting summary judgment cannot be sustained.
It has long been well established in this state that a municipality has a duty to exercise reasonable and ordinary care to keep its streets in a reasonably safe condition for ordinary travel. 3 A necessary corollary to this rule is the duty to maintain erected traffic control devices directing travel at intersections on these streets in a reasonably safe, visible and working condition. 4 Traffic control devices include signs and signals placed at or in the immediate vicinity of an intersection for the purpose of controlling the flow of traffic. Traffic lights and stop signs are obvious examples of such devices.
Once a traffic control device is installed by a municipality it has a duty to properly maintain it, so that pedestrians or motorists who come to or are entitled to depend upon it will not be endangered by its non-operation, or failure to properly convey its traffic message. A municipality may be held liable for accidents caused by its improperly maintained traffic countrol devices at intersections if it has notice, be it actual or contructive, that a traffic control device it installed at an intersection is either so obstructed or inoperative as not to afford a reasonably prudent pedestrian or motorist warning of the traffic condition, and if the other elements of actionable negligence are present. Pearson v. Boise City. 5
Reviewing the record, we find the following factual issues to be in dispute.
(1) Whether the stop sign was so obscured by overhanging foliage as to prevent a...
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