129 Ala. 170 | Ala. | 1900
The third averred, that they “dug a ditch across a public road or highway, along which pedestrians were accustomed to pass;’’ and the sixth, that they “dug a ditch across a certain road which [was] in general use as a wagon and foot way.” Each count except the 2d contained substantially, in different forms of expression, ' the samé averment of duty on the part of defendants, namely, to fill in or bridge over, or otherwise cover said ditch, so that the road would be left substantially as- safe to foot passengers as it was before said excavation, from which neglect of duty, the plaintiff’s intestate was injured, etc. The 2d, without averring as the others did, the duty to bridge or otherwise guard the road, averred that defendants “negligently failed to restore said road to as «substantially safe condition as
The pleas were the general issue, and a special plea of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s, intestate.
The evidence showed also, without conflict, that the road along which pedestrians were accustomed to pass, and in Avhich plaintiff’s intestate fell, did not cross, said ditch; that for the plaintiff tending to -show, that the ditch was dug up or -close to the path on the west, side at the -point where deceased fell in, and then skipped it, and did not pass through it, but left the-•pathway untouched, but unguarded; that for the defendants tending to show, that the ditcli ivas not dug-to or near the pathway on the west side, hut was dug-within from 10 to 20 feet of it on the east side as variously estimated by witnesses. The plaintiff’s- evidence' tended to show that thi-s road had been used for thirty, years or more by the general public by persons in vehicles and on foot; that recently, on account of a wash, that part of the road where tine ditch was, could not be traveled by people in vehicles; that they turned around a short distance and -came into- the road again further on, hut not far off; hut that it continued, as before, to he used by the -public generally as a footpath, along which pedestrians were accustomed to pass.
Stein, a witness for defendants, testified, that he was the owner of the laud through which the road and path passed; that he had never given permission for the road to he opened or used, hut had suffered it to be used by the public, generally as a wagon and foot-way, without objection, ever since he -owned the property, an-cl. for thirty-odd years it had been -so used.
Reversed and remanded.