150 Mass. 218 | Mass. | 1889
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove that, while riding with her husband in a sleigh, she was violently thrown from her seat, in consequence of a defect in the highway, upon an iron brace of the sleigh which had been broken or loosened, and which projected upwards eight or ten inches from the side of the sleigh, and that this brace entered her body, and. pro
The plaintiff requested the court to instruct the jury that “ in this case there was a distinction between accident and injury, and if the broken or loosened brace was not a contributing cause to the plaintiff’s being thrown from the sleigh, but only contributed to the injury received, she could recover,” and this request was refused.
The plaintiff’s counsel at the argument contended, among other things, that, if the plaintiff exercised reasonable care in seeing that the sleigh was ordinarily safe for travel on the highway, she discharged her whole duty, and that it was not her duty to foresee that there might be defects in the highway, and to see to it that the sleigh was in a condition safely to encounter such defects. It does not appear by the exceptions that any objection was specifically taken to the instructions of the court upon this subject, or that the court was asked to define to the jury the tests by which they were to determine whether the sleigh was safe and suitable to be used by travellers on a highway. The court left this to be determined by the practical judgment of the jury. As no specific exception was taken to this course, this contention, whether there is anything in it or not, is not open to the plaintiff.
It does not appear from the exceptions that it was possible for the jury to distinguish the damage received from being thrown from the sleigh from that received from falling upon the brace, or that, if the brace had not been broken and misplaced, any substantial damage would have been received by the plaintiff.
The case, we think, does not require us to consider whether, in actions at common law against persons on the ground of their negligence, the rule of law is as stated in Greenland v. Chaplin, 5 Exch. 243, 248; namely, “ that where the negligence of the party injured did not in any degree contribute to the immediate cause of the accident, such negligence ought not to
This is an action against the inhabitants of a town, under the Pub. Sts. c. 52, § 18, which provide that, “ If a person receives or suffers bodily injury . . . through a defect ... in or upon a highway, ... he may recover . . . the amount of damage sustained thereby,” etc. In actions under this provision of the statute, the injury must have been received solely in consequence of the defect in the highway. If between the cause and the effect the negligence of the plaintiff intervenes, so that the injury received is the direct consequence of this negligence as well as of the defect in the way, and if it is impossible to determine what portion of the injury is caused by either, or that any substantial injury would have been received but for the negligence of the plaintiff, we think that the action cannot be maintained. It does not appear from the exceptions that the present is not such a case.
Fxoeptions overruled.