29 Conn. 434 | Conn. | 1861
We perceive no error in the charge under which this cause was submitted to the jury. On the other hand, we think the principles of law laid down by the judge fully sustained by the authorities, as well as by equity and good sense.
If the defendants, without a charter, had gone into the highway at this place, and made a ditch three and a half feet wide and a foot and a half deep, and left it uncovered, and a person passing that way had fallen into it, without any neglect or presumption on his part, no one will doubt but that he could recover for the injury he had sustained. This is substantially the case before us, if we are correct in our view of it.
The defendants’ charter gave them no authority to make an alteration in this highway without restoring it substantially to its former condition and usefulness. This duty of the defendants applied not merely to the beaten path, which seems to be the claim of the defendants’ counsel, but to the highway throughout, so far as they had altered it, and the people had occasion still to pass over it, in one direction or another; the persons so using the highway being of course bound to use reasonable care in passing over it, which was to be judged of by the circumstances of the particular case. At the place of intersection the highway is twelve rods wide, and the railroad is laid directly across it, upon a level, very nearly, with the high
We do not advise a new trial.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
New trial not advised.