116 A. 635 | N.H. | 1922
Every person making a claim against a town on account of injuries received in the use of highways under P. S., c. 76, is required by s. 7 thereof to file with officers of the town, within ten days, a written statement setting forth, among other facts, "the exact place where and the time when the injury was received." The object of this requirement is to enable the town authorities to examine the place shortly after the alleged injury, while the physical facts are unchanged, in order that they may intelligently consider the merits of the claim and either adjust the damages or prepare a defence. Carr v. Ashland,
The statement filed made claim for an injury received while plaintiff was traveling in the evening upon the sidewalk on High street in defendant town "at a point almost directly in the rear of the hotel barn, by reason of a dangerous embankment and defective railings."
The plaintiff was injured while walking on the only sidewalk on High street, which at this point lies on a curve, with the sidewalk on the inside of the curve. The plaintiff was proceeding with the highway on her left and a railed embankment on her right. The hotel barn referred to sits on a lower level, and backs up to High street somewhat diagonally, its northeasterly corner touching the embankment so that its northerly end and its easterly side each form acute angles with the street. The accident occurred after she had passed 34.5 feet beyond the corner, at a point which she describes as on "the back side of the barn," as distinguished from the back end of the barn by which she had passed. The railing along the embankment in either direction from the point where it touched the barn consisted of a single wooden rail supported on the top of small iron rods or posts set in the stone wall of the embankment. The wall, 2.5 to 4.5 feet high, was built of field stone, and its top surface was irregular. The surface of the sidewalk, constructed of concrete, was six inches higher than the top of the stone wall, and did not extend out fully to the base of the posts. Plaintiff's evidence tended to show that her injury was due to a fall occasioned by her foot slipping off the edge of the bank. At the point where the accident occurred, and for ten to twelve feet in either direction, the iron posts were out of plumb, leaning away from the sidewalk four inches at places, and leaving *348 spaces from 6 to 9.5 inches between the finished surface of the walk and the railing. This defect seems to have been easily apparent, while there was no evidence of any defects in the walk or railing opposite the northerly end of the barn.
The word "rear" is not a technical term to be applied with mathematical precision. Kendall v. Green,
It could be found from all the foregoing facts that the statement was sufficient to satisfy the purpose of the statute. No other grounds are urged in support of defendant's motions. The order, therefore, must be
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred.