17 Ga. 136 | Ga. | 1855
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This was a public road existing by prescription ; and consequently, required no written authority, emanating from the Inferior Court, to prove its existence as a highway. It is not denied but that the mill-race was dug across it by the defendant, and that too, without authority of law to do it. The first branch of the case is therefore made out, to-wit: an obstruction in the road by the fault of the defendant; and it only remains to inquire, whether or not .the plaintiff exercised ordinary care to avoid it ?
He directed his servant, in the. first place, to examine the bridge across the race, to ascertain whether it could be passed, and found that the holes made by the slipping of the plank,
Could the master, then, acting upon the information of his servant, be considered as having exercised ordinary care? lie-did but follow the common practice of the country. Is it not the universal custom, in pursuing a journey, w'hen an obstruction occurs, to consult the driver, and to act upon his opinion ? And if this be the common practice, Mr. May could not bo said to be wanting in ordinary care in following it.’
It may not be amiss to take this occasion to suggest, that every unauthorized change of a public road, in this State, (and nothing is more usual,) subjects the persons to the consequences which have been visited upon this defendant. How common is it, in clearing a new-ground, to run the fence on the old road, and to compel the travelling public to wear down the stumps and other obsructions in the new ? Land proprietors would do well to take heed to their ways, in this respect, and in reference to this clear legal liability. And let it not be said, as has been falsely charged, as to other decisions, that this is some new-fangled doctrine originating with this Court. It is-laid down in Serj. Qarthew, who reported, in the reign of King James, that if a man lay logs of wood across a highway, though a person may, with care, ride safely by, yet, if by means thereof, my horse stumble and fling me, I may bring an action. (Carth. 194, 457. See, also, Buller's Nisi Prius, 26.) But the modern rule is more lenient; and notwithstanding the defendant be in fault, it does not dispense with another’s using ordinary care and caution for himself.