This is an action to recover for damages to the plaintiff’s automobile through the alleged insufficiency of a culvert in defendant town which by law the town was bound to maintain and keep in suitable repair for the safe travel of those having occasion to pass over it. The case was tried by jury, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff, and the case comes here on the defendant’s exceptions to the overruling of its motion for a directed verdict and for the failure of the court to comply with certain requests to charge.
The transcript is made the bill of exceptions and is to control. An examination of that portion of the transcript, to which our attention is called, reveals evidence tending to prove the following facts: That the culvert is situated in a part of the
The testimony upon which the defendant relies in support of the contention that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence was mainly that of the plaintiff himself, Cornelius Lawrence, and Mrs. Lawrence, parties who were in the car at the time of the accident, and a Mr. Hersey. It is the testimony of these witnesses that the parties discussed so fully; and while some portions of it, when detached from other portions of their testimony
The evidence upon this point was to the effect that just before the accident the plaintiff was coasting down the hill toward the culvert at the rate of fifteen or twenty miles an hour; that he did not have the engine connected up and the automobile, was going on its own momentum, and, when he got possibly within twenty feet of the turn at or near the culvert, it became rather dusty in front of him so he could not see clearly; that immediately he pushed in the brake and slowed down to about four miles an hour; that as he got onto the curve of the road, just before reaching the culvert, the dust became so thick that the light on the automobile did not penetrate it; that, as soon as he realized that he could not see, he reached for the emergency brake, evidently with the intention of stopping the car, and at that moment the car accidently deflected to the inside of the curve, the earth gave way, and the car went off the culvert, and the injury was thereby caused.
The ninth request was properly denied. The evidence in the case did not call for a compliance with it. Our attention has not been called to any evidence that the automobile was running wild.
We find no error in the case, and the judgment is affirmed.