21 Me. 29 | Me. | 1842
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
— Two questions are raised in this case for the consideration of the Court. The first is, was the plaintiff, at the time of the misfortune complained of, exercising due care and precaution ; — and, secondly, had the defendants such notice of the obstruction as to render them culpable, and responsible for the damage sustained by the plaintiff. These the parties have seen fit to refer to the decision of the Court, instead of the jury. The facts agreed upon, and reported by the Judge, as developed at the trial, are supposed to leave nothing for the decision of the Court, but questions of law arising thereon.
As to the question of due precaution, it appears that the plaintiff was riding on horseback, in a public highway, where no obstruction, of the novel kind complained of, was to have been apprehended. He, therefore, could not, reasonably, have
To decide what shall constitute reasonable notice is, in many cases, attended with difficulty. ■ The words “ reasonable notice” are undefined in the statute. Every case will present its peculiar circumstances, so that a decision in one will seldom furnish a precedent for another. It is not considered necessary to prove notice to the town in its corporate capacity, as the language of the statute, taken literally, would seem to import: nor is it necessary that the majority of the inhabitants should have had notice ; nor is it even necessary to bring home the knowledge to any officer of the town. It has sometimes been considered, if it be proved that some principal inhabitant had notice, it would be sufficient. Lobdell v. New Bedford, 1 Mass. R. 153. Here again the rule would be indefinite. Who are to be taken and deemed to'be the principal inhabitants?
In Springer v. Bowdoinham, 7 Greenl. 442, one of the inhabitants of the town, two hours before sunset, had so placed a stick of timber, that one end of it was an obstruction in the highway, and it was passed there by several others of the inhabitants of the town. It is not said whether they, or either or any of them, were principal inhabitants or not. The same evening the plaintiff in that action was passing the place and was overturned in his carriage, and sustained an injury. No officer of the town had notice of the obstruction till the next morning. Yet the defendants were held liable.
In the case here, numbers of the inhabitants of Brunswick were concerned in placing the obstruction across the highway. Who they all were does not certainly appear. Some were minors. One Eaton, was so poor, that, when taxed, his taxes
These facts can scarcely be deemed less cogent, as evidence of notice, than those in Springer v. Bowdoinham. For aught that appears the individuals, who had notice in this case of the obstruction, were equal in substance and respectability with those, who might have had notice in that; and it might have been removed, as it would seem, with about the same expedition and facility, in the one case as in the other. If the case of Springer v. Bowdoinham is to be regarded as a precedent, obligatory upon the Court, although it may seem to go to the extreme verge of the law, it must have a controlling influence upon our decision. Eaton’s desertion of his post, but