97 Mich. 306 | Mich. | 1893
Plaintiff's intestate, Julius Kuhn, while riding along a highway just outside of the city of Grand Rapids, was carried down an embankment, and thrown from his buggy, receiving serious injuries, from which he died after the commencement of this suit. He was going south, and the highway curved to the east. The earth had been filled in over a culvert, so that the roadway at the point where the injury occurred was from 12 to 15 feet above the natural surface. There were no walls supporting the earth, except at the culvert, just south of where the horse went down. ' Opposite this point, on the west side of the roadway, a barrel stood in the roadway. A conduit from 12 to 15 inches in diameter brought water from an old mill-race to a point a few feet west of the barrel. A wooden trough had been connected with the east end of this pipe, the east end of which trough was
Julius Kuhn and his son, who was then about 16 years of age, were in the buggy. The time was' 5 o’clock, on a July morning. The left wheels of the buggy were within two or three feet of the edge of the embankment. As they reached a point nearly opppsite the barrel, the horse took fright, either at the barrel, the noise of the water as it fell into the barrel, or a boulder which stood some distance west, but outside of the traveled way, and shied to the east. The boy pulled upon the right line, the horse stopped, backed a little; the father then caught the lines, but the horse refused to obey the rein, but continued to the east, going down the embankment, breaking through or jumping over a board fence at the bottom of the embankment. The fence caught the buggy, and its occupants were thrown over the dash-board. The horse was hired that morning from a livery'barn, and had not been driven before by father or son. The court directed a verdict for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals.
It is insisted on behalf of plaintiff that it was the duty of the township to erect a railing along the easterly edge of this way, so as to prevent the possibility of such an accident. But the duty of a township in this respect must depend somewhat upon the width of the way provided for travel. Here the way was 40 feet in width. The embankment was not steep, but supported itself. There was an
The circuit judge was right in directing a verdict for defendant, and the judgment is affirmed.