
    Alfred Molway, Appellee, v. City of Chicago, Appellant.
    Gen. No. 14,161.
    1. Streets—what ordinary travel. A person riding a bicycle upon a public street is using it for the purposes of ordinary travel and to such a person a municipality owes the duty to use ordinary care to keep the street in reasonably safe condition.
    2. Streets—how question of exercise of care by municipality determined. Whether the street in question, with a hole in the roadway a foot or fifteen inches deep, with sloping sides, was or was not reasonably safe for ordinary travel thereon, is a question of fact to be determined by the jury.
    3. Verdict—when not excessive. A verdict for $6,000 in an action for personal injuries is not excessive where it appears that as a result of the accident the plaintiff, whose left leg had theretofore been amputated below the knee, sustained a permanent dislocation to the hip of his right leg.
    Action in case for personal injuries. Appeal from the Superior Court of Cook county; the Hon. Robert W. Wright, Judge, presiding.
    Heard in the Branch Appellate Court at the October term, 1907.
    Affirmed.
    Opinion filed November 6, 1908.
    Statement Tb>y the Court. In an action on the case for personal injuries plaintiff had judgment for $6,000 and the defendant appealed.
    In Wells street, Chicago, was an asphalt pavement. In this pavement there was at the time plaintiff was injured a hole twelve or fifteen inches deep, eighteen inches wide and three feet long. Plaintiff at the time of his injury was fifteen years old. Six years before his left leg had been amputated, three inches below the knee. Not knowing that there was such a hole in the pavement, he rode his bicycle into it, when it was quite dark, was thrown from his bicycle and in his fall sustained the injuries complained of. The hole into which he rode had been in the pavement two or three months before the accident.
    Edward J. Brundage and John R. Caverly, for appellant; George L. Reker and Edward C. Fitch, of counsel.
    
      Horton, Brown & Miller, for appellee.
   Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury, “that ordinary travel does not include the use of a street by one riding a bicycle thereon, * * * that a person when riding’ a bicycle on a street is not using said street for the purpose of ordinary travel thereon”, and the court refused to so instruct the jury.

_ Plaintiff had a right to ride his bicycle in a public street, and a bicycle is a vehicle. N. C. S. R. R. Co. v. Cossar, 203 Ill. 608. It is a matter of common knowledge that bicycles have for many years been in common use on the streets of Chicago and other cities. We think the court did not err in refusing to give said instruction.

The court also refused to give for the defendant the following instruction:

“If you believe from the evidence that the street in question at the time and place of the alleged accident was reasonably safe for ordinary travel thereon by persons riding in vehicles, such as wagons, carriages and other similar vehicles, then you are instructed that you should find the defendant, City of Chicago, not guilty, whether you believe that said street at said time and place was or was not reasonably safe for travel by a person riding a bicycle thereon. ’’

The duty of the city to use reasonable care to keep its streets in a reasonably safe condition for use as a street as a highway, is a general duty owing to all who use the street as a street, as a highway, for travel in ordinary modes. Bicycles are in common use, and th® rider of a bicycle in a public street must, we think, be held to use the street as a street for travel in an ordinary mode. It follows that, in our opinion, the instruction was properly refused.

The court for the defendant instructed the jury that the plaintiff could not recover unless they believed that it had been proven by the preponderance of the evidence, “that the street in question, at the time and place of the alleged accident, was not reasonably safe for ordinary travel thereon by persons exercising due care and caution for their safety”, and also that: “A city is not bound under the law to keep its streets absolutely safe, nor is it bound under the law to keep them in reasonably safe condition; it is only bound to use reasonable care to keep its streets reasonably safe for ordinary travel thereon by persons using due care and caution for their own safety.” The jury must under these instructions find, in order to find the defendant guilty, that the street in question was not “reasonably safe for ordinary travel thereon by persons exercising due care and caution for their safety.”

Whether the street in question, with a hole in the roadway a foot or fifteen inches deep, with sloping sides, was or was not reasonably safe for ordinary travel thereon, was a question of fact for the jury on which their verdict must be held conclusive on us.

It is further contended that the damages are excessive. In his fall from the bicycle, plaintiff’s left hip was injured. His left leg had before that time been amputated below the knee. The injuries to his hip consisted of a fracture of the back lip of the acetabulum, the cavity in the hip bone which receives the head, of the thigh bone, and a dislocation of the hip joint. As a result the hip joint is fixed, rigid; the thigh bone is shortened one inch, the muscles of the thigh are somewhat atrophied, so that his left thigh is now five inches smaller than his right, and his condition cannot be remedied.

We cannot say that for such injuries, followed by such consequences, the damages are excessive.

The record is, we think, free from error, and the judgment of the Superior Court will be affirmed.

Affirmed.  