36 Vt. 580 | Vt. | 1864
To sustain the plaintiff’s action in this case, it-was necessary for him to establish the fact that the highway or bridge where he received the injury of which ho complains was a highway or bridge which the town of Underhill was, at the time of receiving the injury, liable by law to keep in repair. Nq question was made on the trial in respect to the insufficiency and want of repair of the bridge, as alleged in the plaintiff’s, declaration, but it was claimed that the road in question never was a highway which the town was liable to keep in repair. The plaintiff did not claim that this alleged highway had been laid out and opened for public travel in any such manner as was prescribed by the statute, but insisted that it became a public highway by a dedication of the land by the land owners to the public use, and by a recognition, acceptance, and adoption of the road as an existing public highway by the agents or officers of the town.
The opening of a road by the land owners to public use, and its use by the public without interruption, and the allowance by the land owners of repairs upon it at the public expense are facts which would tend strongly\to show the intention to dedicate the land by the land owners to the use of a public highway. If this intention was unequivocally manifested, the dedication, so far as
It is claimed on the part of the defendant that the court did not instruct the jury what facts would constitute such adoption. The intention to adopt the road as a present existing highway, must be manifested by acts of the town authorities, and the acts
It is claimed by the defendant that if the jury were justified by the evidence in finding that the road was adopted by the town as a highway, the bridge was not so adopted ; and the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that the work done by Porter, Papineau and Woodworth did not, under the circumstances stated, amount to, or tend to prove, such adoption of the bridge. It was not necessary that any work should have been done upon the bridge under the authority of the selectmen to warrant the jury in arriving at the conclusion that it was adopted as a part of the highway. If the bridge was necessary to con
The defendant objected to the admission of the declarations of the selectmen as testified to by the witnesses Howe and Dixon, and to the effect given in the charge of the court to these declarations. Howe was the owner of the coach and horses which the plaintiff1 was driving at the time of the injury complained of, and testified that on the second day after the accident, Mead, one of the selectmen, and Church, the town agent, of the town of Underhill, called on him and inquired of him the extent of the injury to his coach and horses, and offered to settle with him for the damage, and, at the same time, inquired of the plaintiff as to the injury to him, and proposed to settle with him. Dixon testified that, the next day after the accident, Hapgood, another of the selectmen of Underhill, while at work with a number of men under his charge in repairing the bridge, told him (Dixon) that he (Hapgood) had, before the accident, been requested by Mead, his fellow selectman, to repair the bridge, and that he blamed the other selectmen because they had not repaired it. These declarations of the selectmen were made subsequent to the injury, and were, at the utmost, only subsequent admissions of liability. They were not in themselves acts recognizing the road as a public highway at the time the accident happened, and were not so treated by the court; but the court instructed the jury that these declarations, in connection with the actions of the.selectmen, so soon- after the accident, in making repairs on
Upon the point of the care and diligence which the plaintiff was bound to exercise, the court, instructed the jury that if the plaintiff did not exercise ordinary care and prudence in attempting to cross the bridge, and this contributed to the injury, he could not recover, but that he had a right to presume the bridge safe for a proper load, and was not bound to examine it before attempting to cross it, unless he had been informed that it was unsafe, or had reason to distrust or suspect its safety. The defendant requested the court to charge the jury on this point, that the plaintiff’s conduct in driving upon the bridge under the
We do not regard the defendant’s objection to the allowance of the bills of the plaintiff’s physicians as being well taken. In the case of a severe bodily injury, we regard the services of a physician as being so essentially necessary, that they may be recovered as a part of the general damages directly resulting from the injury; and, we think, that the plaintiff’s expenses on account of the employment of physicians are stated in his declaration with sufficient particularity even to be recovered as special damages. Sedgwick on the Measure of Damages, p. 574 (Marg.) ef seg. Hutchinson v. Granger, 13 Vt. 386, 394.
Judgment of the county court for the plaintiff reversed, and a hew trial granted.