Anderson v. Taft

39 A. 191 | R.I. | 1898

This is an action of trespass on the case for negligence of the town of Cumberland in failing to keep one of its highways safe for travelers. At the trial in the Common Pleas Division the defendant offered testimony that the highway had been used in the same condition it was in on the night of the accident for upwards of twenty years without accident. The court refused the offer, and thereupon the defendant excepted and now urges the refusal as a ground of his petition for a new trial.

There are cases which, expressly or impliedly, sanction the defendant's contention that the testimony is competent evidence on the question of negligence. Quinlan v. City of Utica, 18 N.Y. Supr. Ct. (11 Hun.) 217; 74 N.Y. 503; Hubbell v. The Cityof Yonkers, 104 N.Y. 434. But the weight of authority and, as it seems to us, the better reasons, support the opposite view.Collins v. Inhabitants of Dorchester, 6 Cush. 396; Aldrich v. The Inhabitants of Pelham, 1 Gray, 510; Kidder v.Inhabitants of Dunstable, 11 Gray, 342; Blair v. Inhabitantsof Pelham, 118 Mass. 420; Bailey v. Town of Trumbull,31 Conn. 581. Bassett v. Shares, 63 Conn. 39; Temperance HallAssociation of Trenton v. Giles, 33 N.J.L. 260; Elliot Roads Streets, 646. If the defendant *363 had been permitted to put in the testimony, the plaintiff would have been entitled to rebut it by testimony that accidents had happened within the twenty years. The defendant might then have shown that the accidents were caused, not by the defective condition of the highway, but because of the want of due care on the part of the traveler. Apart from the consideration that other accidents would be res inter alios acta as to the plaintiff, it is apparent that such testimony, could the parties be prepared to meet it, might introduce into the case numerous collateral issues bearing only remotely on the main issue, which would tend to greatly protract the trial, distract the attention of the jury from the issues involved in the suit, and impose great and unnecessary expense on the parties. The opinion in TemperanceHall Association of Trenton v. Giles, 33 N.J.L. (264), states the difficulties liable to be encountered from the admission of such testimony, as follows: "The evidence excluded furnishes a forcible illustration of the necessity of the rule to the trial of causes before juries. The offer was to show that ten thousand persons passed these premises in each year since the hall was erected, without accident. The admission of this evidence would carry with it the right to cross-examine as to the circumstances under which each individual of the multitude passed, and the degree of caution and circumspection used by each; and also the right to introduce evidence of the dangers encountered and, by the exercise of superior vigilance, avoided by each one of these individuals, together with evidence that some one or more of them had met with accidents at the place; in turn opening the way for evidence as to the degree of care exercised by such as had not been so fortunate as to escape; and when the parties, wearied in their endeavors to exhaust this vast field of investigation, rested the cause, the judge would have been compelled to direct the jury to determine whether or not the area was a nuisance, from the character of the footway, the situation of the area with reference to it, and the means taken to guard against accident from its proximity to the sidewalk."

The other ground of the petition for new trial is that the *364 verdict is against the evidence. The testimony was conflicting, and such that different minds might honestly reach different conclusions upon it. There is nothing to show that the verdict was not the fair exercise of the judgment of the jury, and in such cases we are not at liberty to disturb their finding.

New trial denied, and case remitted to the Common Pleas Division with direction to enter judgment on the verdict.

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