65 Me. 547 | Me. | 1876
In our opinion the defect in the way was the proximate cause of the injury, if the facts are as the plaintiffs claim them to be. The travelers had no knowledge of the defect in the way until they came upon it. The horse becoming frightened and unmanageable, the female plaintiff was getting out of the wagon, to avoid the threatened danger, when the accident occurred. She was in the use of common care, in doing so. We think this statement brings the case within the principle of Lund v. Tyngsboro, 11 Cush., 563; and of Page v. Bucksport, 64 Maine, 51. In the series of antecedent events, the act done through the agency of the defendants is the only act occasioned by negligence. Neither the horse nor the driver was in fault. That act was the moving and controlling cause of the accident. The other events were agencies only, through which it operated. Bigelow v. Reed, 51 Maine, 325. Lake v. Milliken, 62 Maine, 240.
But it is otherwise, if the facts are as the defendants claim them to be. If the horse was at rest and manageable, and the persons traveling got out of the wagon, apprehending difficulty in driving the horse by the obstruction, and the horse, (not from any fright) started up as the plaintiff was dismounting, and an injury thereby happened to her, we do not think that in such case the defect could be considered the proximate cause of the injury. In that case, no one was in fault. It was a casualty and misfortune
Tiie other question in the case is, whether the defendants are liable for an injury occurring from the fright of the horse at the rock, neither the horse nor the carriage coming in collision or contact with the rock. Upon this point the weight of authority is with the plaintiffs. There are able opinions in that behalf in the courts of New Hampshire, Yermont, Connecticut, and of several other states. The same doctrine is also advocated in several respectable legal treatises. Bartlett v. Hooksett, 18 N. H., 18. Morse v. Richmond, 41 Vt., 435. Dimock v. Suffield, 30 Conn., 129. Ayer v. Norwich, 39 Conn., 376. Foshay v. Glen Haven, 25 Wis., 288. Red. & Shear, on Neg., 31. Angell on Highways, § 261.
The inclination of the court in Massachusetts, as exhibited in the earlier cases, was apparently favorable to the same view. In Howard v. North Bridgewater, 16 Pick., 189, 190, the court say, “but there may be such obstructions out of the traveled path, as will render the road unsafe; such, for instance, as would frighten horses.” But in the later cases, the opinion of that court, upon the exact question presented here, as well as upon other questions more or less like it, has been most unequivocally the other way. In Keith v. Easton, 2 Allen, 552, it was decided, that an incumbrance “upon the side of a way,” was not a defect in the way, merely because it exposes the traveler’s horse to become frightened by the sight of it, or by sounds or smells issuing from it. In Kingsbury v. Dedham, 13 Allen, 186, the application of the same doctrine was extended to a case where the object at which the horse took fright was within the traveled way, and was of a nature calculated to frighten horses, but was not per se an actual
In our own state, there are but few cases where the question is touched. Cobb v. Standish, 14 Maine, 198, is a novel case where the proposition under discussion is reversed. There the horse was ensnared into a miry pit, instead of being frightened from it. The town was held because the indications of danger were concealed from the notice of the traveler and his horse. It was decided in Merrill v. Hampden, 26 Maine, 234, that if a hole in the road was filled up with stones before the accident so as to be safe for the horse and carriage to pass over, the fact that the horse was frightened at its appearance would not render the town liable for an injury happening on that account. But it is intimated in the opinion, that there might be conditions in the highway for which a town would be responsible, where an injury is caused by a horse taking fright at the appearance of the road. Lawrence v. Mt. Vernon, 35 Maine, 100, was the case of -an injury by a horse taking fright at a pile of shingles on the side of the road outside of the traveled way. The judge at the trial instructed the jury that if the shingles were of a character likely to frighten horses they were a defect in the public way. The court say that the instruction withdrew from the jury the de
We think, upon the plaintiffs’ showing, this action can be maintained. It is a strong case of the kind. The horse was suitable. The driver used proper care. The object which produced the fright was in the traveled way. It was goer se an incumbrance upon and a defect in the way. It was an object likely to terrify a horse. The roads are required to be “kept in repair so that they are safe and convenient for travelers with horses, teams and carriages.” It is admitted that the road was not “in repair.” Was it safe and convenient ? Of course, a town is not accountable for every obstruction upon its highways which would produce fright in horses, nor merely because the road is not safe and convenient. It is impossible to define the municipal obligation by any general rule. Each case must depend somewhat upon its peculiar facts. Of course, whether a road is or not out of repair is generally for the jury to decide. But there are certain conditions of a road which cannot legally be regarded as defects; such as, because the road is hilly; or not all wrought; or because crowded with per
• We are not convinced, however, that a recoveiy can be had in no case where the injury is caused by the fright of a horse at an object upon a highway. Fear is not a despicable quality in the character of man or beast. “Fear has many eyes.” “Early and provident fear is the mother of safety.” It was fear that impelled the traveler, (Lund v. Tyngsboro, supra,) to leap from his carriage to avoid a dangerous defect in the way, when his safety really depended upon his remaining in the caxu’iage. The passenger who jumped from a coach through fear of his safety and thereby received an injury, made the same mistake. Ingalls v. Bills, 9 Metc., 1. But in those cases the defect was regarded as the responsible cause of the injury.
The defendants insist, that the accident is not imputable to the fact that the rock was in the traveled way. ■ They say, that, if it had been situated on the side of the road or just outside of the limits of the road, the result would or might have been the same. In Cook v. Charlestown, supra, (Massachusetts case) it is said: “There is nothing to show that the horse was more frightened than he would have been if it (obstruction) had lain close besides his path, instead of directly in it.” The defendants also rely on the argument, that innumerable things on and about a highway may annoy and frighten a horse which cannot be regarded as defects for which a town would be responsible, and that for that reason in this peculiar class of cases there should be no liability upon the part of the town at all. While these suggestions would have considerable force in many cases, they do not furnish any defense under the particular circumstances of the case at bar. Won constat, that the result would have been the same under the conditions supposed. We think the more reasonable presumption in this case, to be, that the horse would have gone safely along had the impediment not been in the traveled way. Nor does it follow that a town may not be responsible for some objects, because they are not responsible for all-objects, in the highway which detract from the convenience and safety of traveling.
The action to stand for trial.