Harry B. Davis brought this suit to the district «court of Douglas county against the city of «Omaha, the city being a municipal corporation existing under the laws of the state as a city of the metropolitan class, to recover damages which he alleged he had sustained by reason of injuries which he had received through the negligence of the city. At the close of the evidence the jury, in obedience to an instruction of the court, relumed a verdict for the city. Judgment of dismissal of Davis’ case was rendered upon this ver<dict, and he prosecutes here a petition in error.
The undisputed facts, so far as the same are material to this opinion, are: That Judge Doane •owned a lot fronting on Seventeenth street, in said city; said street was one of the public thor•oughfares of the city and used and traveled by the public as such. On the 3d of May, 1892, the authorities of the city, by resolution, ordered a plank sidewalk in front of Judge Doane’s premises to be replaced by a permanent one, and gave *840notice to Judge Doane that unless he constructed such sidewalk within five days from the date of the service on him of said notice it would construct the sidewalk and assess the costs thereof to his property. On the 31st of May, 1892, the five days within which Judge Doane was to construct the sidewalk expired and he had not at that time done anything towards constructing it. The city thereupon notified Judge Doane to-designate the kind of material of which he desired the sidewalk to be constructed. On the 9th of July, 1892, the city ordered the city contractor to-lay an artificial stone sidewalk in front of Judge Doane’s premises, but this was not done. On the 15th of October, 1892, Judge Doane began the construction of the sidewalk of Bandera stone in front of his lot; and in the prosecution of this, work, and in the afternoon of said day, his employe hauled and deposited in the street, outside the curb in front of said lot, a number of large flag-stones. During the night of said 15th of October Davis was driving on this street in a buggy and it ran against these stones, was partially overturned, he was thrown out and injured. No barriers had been erected to prevent the traveler from coming in contact with these stones, nor had any signals been displayed to warn him of their presence. On the 15th of October, 1892., the city did not know that Judge Doane was proceeding to build the walk in front of his premises. On the 4th of November, 1892, the city, being still in ignorance that Judge Doane had built the sidewalk in front of his premises, ordered the city contractor to build a walk there of Indiana stone. Judge Doane testified on the trial as follows:
Q. State if in the fall of 1892 you received an *841order from the city officials that a permanent sidewalk had been ordered laid in front of that property.
A. Yes, sir; I received a notice in the fall, bnt I had several previous notices to lay the walk, and what time the notice was served I can’t now recollect, but having a good plank sidewalk there I concluded I wouldn’t pay any attention to the-notice, but afterwards in the fall, just what time I cannot tell, I received a blank containing prices of stone, kinds of stone the city had a contract for, and notifying me to select from that .such stone as I desired laid.
Q. Well, then what did you do?
A. Then I went on and made the contract with a stone man to lay the walk myself.
Q. So you laid it yourself after having received' this order?
A. Yes. * * * '
Q. Laid it under the order of the city?
A. Yes, sir.
Cross-examination:
Q. You may state whether or not in laying that walk or making your contract you acted under the directions or control in any manner of the city of Omaha?
A. Nothing further than under the directions they had given me to lay the walk.
Bedirect examination:
Q. Never molested you in carrying out that order?
A. No, rather insisted upon its being carried out,' rather more than I thought they would do.
Under this evidence the learned district court, was of opinion that Davis could not recover against the city, and we agree with him. The fee *842of the streets of the municipalities of this state is vested in the municipalities themselves, and the sidewalks of the various municipalities are parts of the streets thereof. We know of no statute of this state, nor of any ordinance of the city of Omaha, which makes, or attempts to make, it the duty of a lot-owner to build, repair, or maintain the sidewalks adjoining his property. Without quoting the statutes under which the city of Omaha exists it may be safely said: That that corporation, as the other municipal corporations of the state, is, by law, charged with the duty of at all times keeping its streets and sidewalks in a reasonably safe condition for travel by the public; and that no municipal corporation, by any act of its own, can devolve this duty on another 'so as to relieve itself from a liability resulting from its failure to perform such duty. (City of Omaha v. Jensen, 35 Neb., 68; City of Beatrice v. Reid, 41 Neb., 214.) And in the case at bar, if Doane was acting for the city, either as its agent, employe, or contractor, or with its knowledge and permission, then his acts in and about the construction of the sidewalk in front of his premises became and were the acts of the city; and if his placing and leaving the flag-stones in the street in the manner in which they were placed and left was negligence, which caused an injury to Davis, he being free from negligence, we have not the slightest doubt but the city would be liable to Davis for such injury. (See the cases cited above, and Stephens v. City of Macon, 83 Mo., 345.)
But what were the relations existing between Doane and the city of Omaha at the time the injury sued for occurred, and at the time the flagstones were placed in the street which caused such *843injury? Section 69 of chapter 12a, Compiled Statutes, — part of the charter of the city of Omaha,— so far as the same is material here, is as follows: “The mayor and city council shall have power * * * to construct and repair, or cause and compel the construction and repair of sidewalks in such city, of such material and in such manner as they may deem proper and necessary; and to defray the costs and expenses of improvements, or any of them, the mayor and council of said city shall have power and authority to levy and collect special taxes and assessments upon the lots and pieces of ground adjacent or abutting upon the streets, avenues, alleys, or sidewalks thus in whole or in part * * * constructed or otherwise improved or repaired, or which may be specially benefited by any of said improvements; * * * Provided further, That in case the grade of any street or part of street used by the public shall not have been established or in any case any street or part thereof shall not have been worked to grade, then and in such case the owner or owners of any lot or lots or lands abutting on such streets or portions of streets as aforesaid shall only be required to construct or repair the sidewalk along such street or part thereof with plank as the council may direct,” etc. As we read this statute it does not malve or attempt to make it the duty of a lot-owner to build, maintain, or repair the sidewalks on his premises; but this statute, and others not quoted, devolve upon the municipal corporation the control of all of its streets and alleys and the duty of paving, grading, and maintaining its streets, building and maintaining and repairing its sidewalks. What means the city may employ, what agencies it may engage in the performance *844of these duties, is left by the legislature to the city authorities. To reimburse itself for the expense of building and maintaining sidewalks in front of lots the municipal corporation is invested with the power and authority to levy and collect special taxes and assessments upon the lots in front of which the sidewalks are built and maintained. True, the statute quoted says that on certain streets lot-owners shall only be required to construct or repair the sidewalks with plank as the council may direct; but this statute falls far short of imposing, or attempting to impose, on a lot-owner the duty of building, maintaining, or repairing the sidewalks adjoining his property.
As already stated, on the 3d of May, 1892, the city authorities notified Doane that the plank sidewalk in front of his premises must be replaced by a permanent one, and also notified him that unless he should build such permanent walk within five days after the service of that notice upon him, that it, the city, would at once proceed to construct such permanent sidewalk. This action of the city was in conformity with its ordinances; and we think the statute, under which the city exists, authorizes the passage of such ordinances. The city, in giving notice to Doane to construct a permanent sidewalk upon his lot, simply licensed him to furnish the material and construct that walk, in accordance with the ordinances of the city, instead of paying the taxes and assessments which the city might levy on the lot to pay the cost of constructing the walk; in other words, Doane became and was a mere licensee of the city; and had he proceeded with the construction of this walk within five days after the service upon him of the notice to construct the walk, then *845we have no doubt that he would have been acting in that manner for and in behalf of the city; and. for his negligence in constructing the walk, if he was guilty of negligence, the city would have been liable. (Stephens v. City of Macon, 83 Mo., 345.) It is doubtless true that an agency once established is presumed to continue until it is shown to have ceased; and we have no doubt that a general permission or license, given by a city to a lot-owner to build or repair a sidewalk on his premises, will continue until revoked by the city, either expressly or by such conduct on its part as would authorize an inference of revocation. In the case at bar the city, in effect, said to Doane: We have determined that the plank sidewalk in front of your premises shall be replaced by a permanent one. We have the authority to build this walk and charge the expense of it to your property, but we give you permission to construct the walk yourself, in accordance with the ordinances of the city, provided you do it within a certain time. The permission then given Doane was coupled with a condition that the work which he was permitted to do should be undertaken by a certain time, and the failure of Doane to avail himself of the permission given, in the time fixed, worked a revocation of such license. But again, after the license given Doane to construct the sidewalk had expired by its own limitation, he was requested by the city to designate the kind of material out of which he desired the walk constructed. Here, then, was an additional notice given Doane by the city that it had revoked the permission given him. Doane, in whatever he did towards constructing this sidewalk, after the time fixed by the city council in which he might construct it, so far as *846this record shows, was a mere trespasser. A lot-owner, because such, has no authority to tear up the sidewalks in front of his premises or to replace them with others. We reach the conclusion, therefore, that the evidence in the record shows that at the time the accident in question happened,' and at the time the flag-stones which caused the accident Were placed in the street by Doane, he was neither the agent nor the licensee of the city. The city of Omaha is, however, none the less liable in this case for the injury sustained by Davis, if it knew prior to the accident of the existence in the street of these flag-stones; or if they had remained in the street such a length of time prior to the accident as to sustain a finding that the city, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have known of their existence, and was guilty of negligence in not so knowing. The flagstones which caused Davis’ injury were left in the street in the afternoon of the night he was injured. The record does not show that any officer of the city knew of the existence of these flag-stones in the street, or that Doane was building the sidewalk prior to the time the accident occurred. The burden of showing that the city was guilty of negligence in not knowing of the presence of the flagstones in the street was upon Davis. It does not appear from the record that these flag-stones were deposited in a part of the street used for business purposes, nor in a part of the street which was so constantly used and traveled as to make it negligence per se for the city officials not to know of their existence during the short time that intervened between their being left in the street and Davis’ being hurt. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.