51 A. 897 | N.H. | 1902
A statutory nuisance, in the nature of a highway obstruction or encroachment, is not necessarily an actual nuisance. Hopkins v. Crombie,
Whether the stepping-stone in controversy was a nuisance, for the purposes of the plaintiff's case, was, from its character and location, peculiarly a question for the jury. Hopkins v. Crombie,
As the plaintiff's request called for instruction that the stepping-stone was, by mere force of the statute and regardless of its character, location, or effect, a nuisance for the purposes of his case, it was properly denied. No exception was taken to the instructions given, and in the absence of evidence to the contrary they were presumably correct. Mitchell v. Railroad,
Exception overruled.
All concurred. *249