delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee’s horse was so injured, by getting into a hole in one of the bridges of Prince George’s County, across which he was driving, that he died; whereupon the appellee sued the appellants for damages. It appears from the record, that the appellee knew the bridge was in bad and unsafe condition ; that on the morning of the day the accident occurred the appellee, in passing to Washington, crossed the ford by the side of the bridge instead of
The first question presented by the bill of exceptions, arises upon the refusal of the Court to grant the first prayer of the defendants (appellants) which is as follows, “that, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this suit unless the accident complained of happened while he was exercising reasonable prudence and care, and as he has offered no evidence on this point their verdict must be for the defendants.”
It is well settled in this State, that the burden of showing contributory negligence on the part of a plaintiff, is on the defendant. Bacon’s Case, 58 Md., 484. This rule has been laid down in suits against railroads for injuries occasioned by them; and we see no reason for establishing a different rule as applied to accidents occasioned by defective county roads and bridges. The presumption, that a man will act prudently and with care for his own safety, and will not recklessly rush into destruction must exist as well in the one case as in the other. The inference, of a distinction and of a different rule as applied to suits against a county for defective roads causing injury, which is sought to be drawn from the language of the Court in Gibson’s Case, 36 Md., 229, is unwarranted. It was not designed to make a different rule. The plaintiff in that case, hy his prayer having at his own request obtained an instruction which would seem to impose the burden on him, it was no ground of complaint to the defendant, that he was allowed to assume that burden. If there be evidence, tending to show there was contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, it is for the jury to say whether it existed; and in such case it ought not to be ignored in the instructions to the jury. In this case it is argued, that because the evidence showed, that the plaintiff knew of the .condition of the
Upon a careful examination of all the cases referred to by the appellants’ counsel, we do not find a different doc
If this defect in the bridge had existed and the county commissioners could be reasonably affected with notice of' it, as the evidence indicates was the case, then their liability to the plaintiff for his injury is undeniable. Duckett’s Case, 20 Md., 174; Gibson’s Case, 36 Md., 237, and County Commissioners of Harford County vs. Hamilton, 60 Md., 340.
The prayer of the plaintiff is obnoxious to no objection except, that it ignores the question of contributory negligence, of which his knowledge of the defect in the bridge was some evidence, though as we have said'not conclusive. Notwithstanding the onus was on the defendant to show contributory negligence, as there was some evidence tend
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.