105 Me. 189 | Me. | 1909
Action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff while riding horseback along a town way in the defendant town, by reason of his horse stepping into a hole in the traveled part of the way. The case is before this court on defendants’ motion to set aside a verdict for the plaintiff.
1. The first, and perhaps chief, contention in support of the motion is that the plaintiff’s proof located the alleged defect at another and different place in the way than that described as its location in the required written notice to the town after the accident.
The language of the written notice, as to the location of the defect, is : "The particular place on said road where I was injured
was at or near the foot of the Yeo Hill, so-called, at á culvert that
The record discloses the 'following facts and conditions :
The accident occurred at a culvert crossing the road between two hills — that on the north called Yeo Hill, and that on the south Hignett’s Hill. These hills are neither very steep nor long. From the place of the accident to the top of Hignett’s Hill is stated to be 753 feet, and to the top of Yeo Hill about 300 feet. There are two other culverts crossing the road at or near the bottom of these hills — one 213 feet .north, and the other 203 feet south of the middle culvert.
It seems a fair conclusion, from all the evidence, that the middle culvert was at the lowest point between the hills, and that there was a slight decline from the northerly to the middle culvert.
The defendants contended that the location of the defect described in the written notice was thereby necessarily limited to the northerly culvert, because that was the culvert "at or near the foot of the Yeo Hill.” The plaintiff’s evidence established the fact that his injuries were occasioned by a hole, such as described in his notice, located at the middle culvert. No claim was made that there was a similar hole at the northerly culvert.
It was, therefore, an issue of fact for the jury whether the plaintiff’s injuries were caused by the defect — the same defect, described in the notice, or, in other words, if the culvert described in the notice was the middle culvert. This issue was sharply tried out, and the jury decided it in the plaintiff’s favor. A careful examination of the record fails to satisfy us that that finding was not justified by the evidence.
The jury may have found, and we could not say that such a finding would be manifestly wrong, that the location of the defect proved answered accurately the general descriptive words of the notice: "The particular place . . . where I was injured was
Was the middle culvert the one "across the water course?” If it was, that fact necessarily determined in the plaintiff’s favor the issue whether the defect at the middle, culvert, which caused the injury, was the same defect described in the notice. Upon this question the evidence was somewhat conflicting. The defendants claimed that the northerly culvert ran across a water course also. But it fairly appears, we think, that the water course at the middle culvert was the larger, and at the lowest point between the hills; that it was the outlet of a well defined stream, draining a large area, and that water flowed in it during the whole, or practically the whole year. True, there was also a water course under the northerly culvert, through which water flowed in times of freshets and heavy rains, but, while it was claimed that this water course drained a small ravine or springy spot outside the highway, it was not shown that any well defined stream of water passed through it, and it was admittedly dry during a considerable portion of the year.
It is of significance, we think, on this point, that two of the defendants’ witnesses, Mr. Savage, the selectman, and Mr. Tuttle, the substitute for the commissioner, spoke of the middle culvert as the "bridge.”
We think the evidence preponderated in support of the conclusion that the water course over which the middle culvert crossed was "the water course” — the only natural and well defined water course, between those hills. But this was a question of fact for the jury to pass upon. They have passed upon it, after seeing and hearing the witnesses, and must have found, under appropriate instructions, that the middle culvert was the one mentioned in the written notice "that runs across the water course at that point.” We find no reason to disturb that finding.
2. The defendants further urge that there was not sufficient proof of the twenty-four hours’ actual notice of the defect prior to the accident, as required by statute. The plaintiff claimed that Mr. Tuttle, who was at the time acting as a substitute for the road
3. The jury were authorized by the evidence to find that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care at the time of the accident. He said he had no knowledge of the defect or of any other hole in the road. He had a right to assume, with no knowledge to the contrary, that the traveled part of this town way in the month of June would be safe for driving thereon on horseback. He, and all
4. Excessive damages. The verdict was $441.67. It will serve no useful purpose to incorporate here any extended statement of the evidence introduced to establish the plaintiff’s damages. The defendants contended that his injuries were very slight, and the resulting disabilities limited. But, on the other' hand, it appeared that the plaintiff received a very violent fall, being thrown over his horse’s head on to the road, and the horse fell upon him, where he lay, dazed or partly unconscious, till assisted up by Mr. Yeo and Mr. Williams. In his notice to the town within fourteen days after the accident he stated: "I received a sprained shoulder, the edges of the bone of the shoulder being broken, my hips and back were wrenched and strained, and I was injured internally and have been spitting blood since the accident.”
Dr. Smith, a witness for the defense, was called to. the plaintiff the day of the accident and could find "no dislocation or fracture” of the shoulder. He was notified again that night, "that there was certainly something broken in his shoulder and he wanted me to come back again. I went back and went through as careful an examination as I could give him and decided I couldn’t find any fracture or dislocation, and told him so.” On the 7th of June, Dr. Dascombe was called in consultation and no fracture or dislocation of the shoulder was found.
On July 24th, Dr. Bean, who was at the plaintiff’s house, made a slighffexamination of the shoulder finding it "considerably swollen.” "He said that there was great pain when I moved the arm.” The plaintiff testified that he was in bed "about ten daysand that he carried his arm in a sling "somewhere about five or six months that he spit blood "quite a little” after the accident, and that at the time of the trial, a year and a half after the accident, his shoulder still troubled him. Dr. Dascombe stated that in an examination of the plaintiff the night before the trial "I found restricted movement of the right arm, right shoulder joint, and at the acromial end of the clavicle a slight enlargement, more so than on the other side.” The Doctor further said : "Of course, it won’t get well in one week,
From an examination of all the evidence bearing upon the nature of the plaintiff’s injuries, and the extent of his resulting disabilities, it is the opinion of the court that the amount of damages awarded by the jury is not excessive. The entry will be,
Motion overruled.
Judgment on the verdict.