99 Me. 190 | Me. | 1904
Action to recover damages for injuries sustained by reason of an alleged defect in highway in defendant town. The case
On the day in question, the plaintiff and her sister-in-law, Mrs. Perry, with two small children of the latter, had driven out with a team to make some calls. Mrs. Perry drove, and the plaintiff sat
Besides she was driving out of the traveled part of the way. Towns have fully performed their duties to the traveling public when they have constructed and maintained wrought ways of reasonable width and smoothness. If the driver chose, without reasonable cause, to drive outside such a way, she did it at her own risk and the risk of the plain tiff, and not at the risk of the town. No reason appears in this case to justify the driver in guiding, if she did guide, her horse so far to the right of the road. The little ridge of earth, three inches high, left when the water pipe was laid, was not an obstruction. It was hardly an inconvenience. It could be easily
In Mosher v. Smithfield, 84 Maine, 844, plaintiff failed to hold a verdict merely because there was no evidence, one way or the other, as to the care of the driver. The circumstances were as consistent with one theory as with the other. For it is the law in this state that a town is not liable in a case like this unless its fault was the sole cause of the injury. And it is incumbent upon a plaintiff to prove affirmatively, not only that no want of due care on his own part contributed to the injury, but likewise that there was none on the part of the driver, if any. Gleason v. Bremen, 50 Maine, 222, Mosher v. Smithfield, supra. This is a stronger case for the defendant than Mosher v. Smithfield, for, as we have already said, the circumstances here show affirmatively that want of due care on the part of the driver, did contribute to the injury. And they show it so clearly and unmistakably, that no other inference or conclusion is warrantable. The ruling of the court was therefore right.
But had it been otherwise, the case presents another insuperable obstacle to recovery by the plaintiff, and that is the plaintiff’s own want of ordinary care. Though this ground was not made a basis for the ruling below, it is proper to consider it here, for it is a wise rule of the law that exceptions will not be sustained in any event, if the excepting party must ultimately fail upon the undisputed facts. Matthews v. Fisk, 64 Maine, 101; Farnsworth Co. v. Rand, 65 Maine, 19.
The entire evidence offered by the plaintiff is made a part of the bill of exceptions. It shows that plaintiff had known of the1 existence of the hole and its general location for at least six years, though she says she did not know precisely where the edge of it was, on account of the long grass. She could see the mouth of the drain from her windows. She testified that she knew the hole was “a dangerous place.” Two months previous she had notified the mayor
Exceptions overruled.