135 A. 713 | Vt. | 1927
The plaintiff was riding as a guest in a Hudson automobile owned and operated by Joseph Harney, of Fair Haven. As they were passing over a highway bridge in the defendant town it collapsed, precipitating the car and its occupants into the stream below. The plaintiff brought this suit for damages for personal injuries then sustained, and obtained a verdict and judgment at the last March Term of Rutland county court. The defendant brings the case here on an exception to the court's refusal to comply with its seasonable request for the following instruction: "If you find that the Hudson automobile was not legally registered and not legally on the highway at the time of the accident, your verdict should be for the defendant." The only basis for such an instruction is found in the cross-examination of Harney regarding this car as follows:
"Q. How long had you had it?
A. Had it about six months. Oh, about three months, I guess, three or four months.
Q. Was it registered in your name?
*174A. No, it wasn't.
Q. You were operating a car (that) was not registered in your own name, were you?
A. Yes."
At this point counsel for the plaintiff objected on the ground of incompetency, irrelevancy, and immateriality, and the court ruled "That is excluded, unless you can show non-registration of the car had something to do with accident." To this ruling no exception was saved.
It is plain that the defendant's situation here depends largely, if not entirely, on the proper construction of this ruling. If it is to be considered as equivalent to an order to strike out all the testimony quoted, there is left no basis for the charge asked for. If, on the other hand, it is to be construed as a ruling that no further testimony on the subject of registration was to be received, or that the last question and answer was to be stricken out, there would be enough in the record to require a consideration of the defendant's request.
While it is our duty to construe this part of the record most strongly for the plaintiff, we must give it a reasonable construction, and in view of the fact that the plaintiff did not ask the court to order the testimony stricken out, and in view of the fact that the court made no such order, we think the most that the plaintiff can rightfully claim is that we are to disregard the last question and answer — to which alone objection was made. Thus construed, the testimony is sufficient to sustain the defendant's point, if well made.
The question presented was expressly excepted from the decision in Gilman v. Central Vermont Ry. Co.,
It must be kept in mind that the action here resorted to is brought under a statute. Any remedy that the plaintiff has against the defendant is purely statutory. At common law no such remedy was available. Then, too, it must be remembered that the action is not, strictly speaking, predicated upon negligence, *175
but upon the failure to comply with a statutory requirement.Graves v. Waitsfield,
This accident occurred August 12, 1925; by the law then in force (G.L. 4669), Harney was required to license this car, and (G.L. 4716), its operation on the public highway was prohibited until it was registered.
As shown in the Gilman Case, this Court held in Johnson v.Irasburgh,
The rule of law announced in the Johnson Case has been the law of this State for more than fifty years. That it was satisfactory to the people is evidenced by the fact that the Legislature made no change in the statute until 1894, about twenty years after it was announced, when the provision against Sunday travel was repealed. Unless we are to change the law, the logic of these cases requires us to hold that one who operates on the public highway, an unregistered motor vehicle, is not in a position to collect of the town damages for the insufficiency of such highway. We see no good reason for departing from the established rule, and we hold that one cannot be heard to complain of the want of repair of a highway that he was by statute prohibited from using.
But this plaintiff knew nothing of Harney's failure to comply with the law, is he to be denied a recovery? The logic *176 of the Johnson Case compels us to hold that he is. It must be remembered that it is the vehicle that is forbidden the use of the highway; the defendant town was under no obligation to furnish a safe road for it; all who occupied it, however ignorant and however innocent, are in the same position that the car was. They were not "travelers" within the meaning of the statute, and were on the highway at their own risk.
Both the questions herein discussed were up for decision inFeeley v. Melrose,
Judgment reversed, and judgment for the defendant.