Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This сause has been three times argued. We understand from the case, as well as from the statement of the defendants’ counsel at the first argument, that so far as the liability of the town might depend on the length of time that the bales of hay had been suffered to lie upon the highway, or upon proper notice to the town officers that they were there, the ruling of the county court were such that the defendants took no exception. The case, therefore, stands in this court on precisely the
I. Does the fact that the hay lay upon the margin instead of the path of the highway alter the rule of liability ?
If a town may be liable for a failure to remove an object unlawfully deposited upon the traveled track, for the reason that it obstructs travel by its frightful appearance, and thus renders the road unsafe, they must be equally liable when the object lies upon the margin, and naturally produces — as the jury under the charge have found it did in this case — precisely the same result. The result produced is, that the wrought path cannot be safely used by travelers. The cause which produces the result is an unlawful deposit of private property within the lines of the highwаy under the control of the town. If towns are bound to regulate their conduct with any reference to security from fright, less cannot be required of them than the removal of such obstructions as were complained of in this case, from any part of the highway, when
Nor does it alter the case that the party injured may sustain an action against the person who placed the nuisance upon the highway. It is the right of the party to proceed against the’ town if they are in fault, and the town may, if held to damages, look to the individual who obstructed the highway. See Newbury v. Pass. R. R. Co.,
II. In examining this second question — whether towns are bound to remove obstructions deposited upon their roads when their natural operation is to occasion accidents by fright in using ordinary horses — we must, as in all questions upon a statutory liability, have recourse to the statute and gather its meaning, as we can, from its language, its reason, and purpose; from the light shed upon it by the other statutory provisions relating to the same general subject, and by the judicial interpretation it has received. The statute in terms requires towns to keep their highways in. “ good and sufficient repair,” and makes them liable for special damages sustained by reason of their “ insufficiency or want of repair.” This language is quite broad enough to cover a case where a road cаnnot safely be travelled with ordinary horses. A statute, however, should not always be interpreted literally. It is often and properly said that this statute is not intended to impose an absolute liability upon towns for every insufficiency. They are only required to do what is practicable to be done to provide and preserve a condition of reasonablе safety in their roads with reference to the amount and kind of travel they accommodate : Prindle v. Fletcher,
The recent decisions of the courts of Massachusetts, for the leаrning and ability of which we have great respect, tend to a different result from the one reached by us : Keith v. Easton,
Concurrence Opinion
concurred. Pierpoint, C. J., having presided in the court below, and Pece, J., being a tax-payer in tbe defendant town, did not sit; but after judgment they expressed their concurrence with the views stated in tbe opinion. Kellogg, J., who was upon the bench, and heard tbe case when first argued, entertained tbe same views.
