127 A. 300 | Vt. | 1924
The action being purely statutory, the statute should be strictly construed, and its provisions are the limits of the defendant's liability. Baxter v. Winooski Turnpike Co.,
Under statute permitting recovery of damages from a town for injuries to a person or his property by reason of the insufficiency or want of repair of a bridge or culvert which the town is liable to keep in repair, if such injury is caused by a *276
defect in the highway acting concurrently with the negligence of a fellow-traveler, so that the combination of the two is the proximate cause of the injury, recovery cannot be had under the statute. Bartram et ux. v. Town of Sharon,
W.E. Tracy and C.G. Austin Son for the plaintiff.
Questions of negligence, where the law has no settled rule of diligence, cannot be determined as a matter of law. Barber v.Essex,
In action under a statute, the statute need not be pleaded, but it is sufficient if the case is brought within the statute by alleging the requisite facts. 1 Chitty's Pl. 16th Am. ed. 237; Gould Pl. 111, § 16, note 3; 20 Enc. Pl. Pr. pp. 594, 595;Griswold v. Gallup,
An overruled demurrer in a civil case at law is waived by pleading to the merits. German v. Bennington, etc., R.R. Co.,
The alleged insufficiency of the bridge was lack of suitable guards or railings at its sides to protect travelers thereon from driving or falling off at those points.
The defendant at the close of plaintiff's evidence and of all the evidence moved for the direction of a verdict in its favor on various grounds, among which was in substance this: That, upon all the evidence in the case, it did not appear that plaintiff's injuries were caused solely by the insufficiency or want of repair of said bridge, but, on the contrary, it did appear that such injuries were the result, in whole or in part, of the negligence of the driver of the truck. The motion was overruled, and the defendant had an exception.
It is not claimed that the negligence of the driver was imputable to the plaintiff. But it is stoutly urged that since the action is purely statutory — as it, of course, is — and the damages given by statute are such, only, as occur to a person or his *278
property "by reason of the insufficiency or want of repair of a bridge or culvert which the town is liable to keep in repair" (see G.L. 4615), no recovery can be had if the concurring negligence of the driver contributed to the injury. Numerous cases from other jurisdictions, among which are McMahan v.Harvard,
This brings us to the question of whether the evidence was sufficient to take the case to the jury on the question of the driver's negligence. In considering the evidence for the purpose of determining this, certain well-established rules should be borne in mind. In the first place, the evidence must be considered in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Morse'sEstate v. Town of St. Johnsbury,
These facts were undisputed: The accident occurred in the forenoon, on July 5, 1923. The plaintiff, then eight years of age, in company with a Mrs. Carey and her three daughters, Kathryn, Hazel, and Ardelle, was traveling in a Ford truck from the Carey home in the defendant town to the village of Fletcher Center over the highway of which the bridge in question is part. Kathryn and Hazel sat on the front seat of the truck, Mrs. Carey and Ardelle sat on the rear seat, and the plaintiff sat on the floor back of the rear seat. Kathryn was driving. The truck went off the west side of the bridge into the stream below.
The plaintiff's evidence tended to show these facts: The floor of the bridge is stone. Measured on the floor, it is 17.6 feet wide. On either side, resting on the floor, is, or was, a log 7 or 8 inches in diameter. Between these logs is 1.6 feet of dirt, in depth, so that the road bed, on the bridge, is 11 or 12 inches higher than the top of the side logs. The width of the traveled track, on the bridge, is 12.2 feet. Grass and tall weeds grew on either side of the traveled track, from the track to the side of the bridge, and beyond, except at the very opening. Going south from the bridge the road rises 10 1/2 feet in a distance of 268 feet, and going north it rises 8.8 feet in a distance of 232 feet. The road curves slightly to the west at the bridge. There is nothing about the bridge to apprise a traveler approaching from the south of its existence. The morning of the accident there were ruts in the road extending from a point more than 268 feet south of the bridge to and across the bridge; these ruts were not of uniform depth, but just south of the bridge, and on it, they were approximately 3 inches deep. It had rained the day and night before the accident and the road was slippery. The truck approached the bridge from the south at a speed of not more *280 than ten miles an hour, and when it reached the top of the hill, a little more than 268 feet from the bridge, the driver "throttled down" the engine and ran "very slow" to the place where the accident occurred. The driver testified, in substance, that when about half way down the hill she attempted to turn the truck to the left out of the ruts, and got the front wheels out, but the rear wheels "caught * * * seemed to catch in the ruts," whereupon, she tried to turn the front wheels back into the ruts, and while so engaged the truck "just seemed to skid off, it skidded out" and went off the side of the bridge "into the brook." She testified further, that she was not conscious that they were going over at any time before they went over; that she at no time turned the left wheel of the truck out of the traveled part of the road, but "was on where other cars traveled"; that she did not apply the brake because the "truck was going so slow I didn't need it, and when it happened we went so quick I didn't have time."
On cross-examination she testified that she knew how to operate a car and apply the brakes; that she was familiar with the road and the location of the bridge, and knew that the bridge had no rail or other guard; that she knew the road was rutty and some slippery, and knew the danger of trying to get out of ruts under those circumstances; that the car would undoubtedly have stayed in the ruts if she had let it; that she did not apply the brakes, and had she done so soon enough she could have stopped the car before it left the bridge.
Our attention is also called to certain parts of the defendant's evidence which tend to refute the plaintiff's claim as to how the accident happened, but since it is not the province of this Court to weigh evidence and balance inferences, in cases of this kind, the latter evidence is not germane to our inquiry.
It comes to this: Do the facts developed on the cross-examination of the driver show that in the circumstances she was negligent, as a matter of law, in attempting to turn out of the ruts, and also, in failing, later, to apply the brakes? The fact that she knew all about the situation and appreciated its dangers, did not as a matter of law, require her to keep the truck in the ruts, or apply the brake at any particular distance from the bridge. Coates v. Town of Canaan,
So, too, the questions whether a railing would have averted the accident, and whether the defendant was short in the performance of its legal duty in failing to provide a railing, were for the jury.
After verdict and before judgment, defendant filed a motion to set aside the verdict on the grounds, here relied upon, that it was unsupported by evidence, contrary to the instructions of the court, and excessive in amount. The motion, after hearing, was overruled and the defendant had an exception. This motion was addressed to the legal discretion of the court, and the disposition of it is not reviewable, unless it appears that in its exercise that discretion was abused. Dyer v. Lalor,
Subsequent to the overruling of the latter motion, the defendant filed a motion asking the court to reduce the amount of damages awarded on the grounds that it was excessive, not sustained by the evidence, and contrary to the instructions of the court. This motion was overruled and the defendant excepted. The only error urged under this exception is that the court did not exercise its judgment and discretion in disposing of the motion. It is by no means clear that this question was raised below, but assuming that it was it is without merit. The contrary not appearing, it will be assumed that the court exercised its discretion. The defendant's claim is based solely on the statement in the record that "The court held that the question involved in said motion had already been disposed of in overruling the motion previously filed by the defendant asking the court to set aside the verdict." This does not support the defendant's contention. That the court exercised its discretion in disposing of the previous motion is not questioned. Under that motion it had authority to do what this motion asks for if, in its judgment; the ends of justice required it, Smith v. Martin etal.,
The defendant excepted to the refusal of the court to charge the jury as follows, "A traveler whether afoot or a passenger in a public or private conveyance, regardless of age or condition of life, assumes relative to the liability of a town, the risk incident to travel that may result wholly or in part from the careless, negligent or wrongful act of third persons." The subject-matter of this request was fully covered by the charge, which was not excepted to. It is not claimed that the negligence of a third person other than the driver was responsible, *283 in whole or in part, for the accident; and as to the effect of her negligence the court instructed the jury, as we have seen, that, "If you find that a combination of the concurrent negligence of the driver of the truck, provided you find that she was negligent, and the insufficiency of the bridge together constituted the efficient and proximate cause of the plaintiff's injuries, then * * * your verdict will be for the defendant"; and, also, that the insufficiency of the bridge "must have been the direct and immediate and sole operative cause of the accident." Even upon the theory on which the case was tried, this was all the defendant was entitled to.
The defendant excepted to the charge on the subject of plaintiff's contributory negligence on the ground that his negligence was not "as a matter of law" in the case, and that treating it as in the case tended to confuse the mind of the jury on the real question involved. The question of a plaintiff's negligence is always involved in this class of cases, unless clearly waived by the defendant. The defendant says in its brief that it made no effort to charge plaintiff with contributory negligence, but, even so, if it remained passive on this question the plaintiff had the burden of showing freedom from such negligence, and a charge covering that element was necessary. But it can hardly be said that the defendant remained passive. After it had objected to this portion of the charge for the reason above stated, its counsel was asked if he conceded that plaintiff's negligence did not contribute to the injury, to which he replied, "I don't make any concessions of any kind." In these circumstances, the defendant is not in a position to complain of the charge, since it is admitted that the court correctly stated the law on this subject.
The defendant's evidence tended to show that the truck turned to the left about halfway up the hill and went straight "diagonally from the center of the road toward the culvert"; that most of the way the left wheels were entirely outside the traveled part of the highway, in the grass. One witness testified concerning the tracks of the truck, "I should say that they must have been nearly out of the traveled part of the highway at the lower end, near the culvert." Another testified, "The right hand wheel was nearly over to the left hand side." And still another, "The left one (track) went off the wing about 3 or 4 feet from the corner of the culvert * * * the *284 right one hit the log * * * that is, the track showed that it went on the east side of the log." And another testified that he found "the log was broke and shoved endways about 4 feet * * * toward Fletcher Center." With defendant's evidence standing thus, plaintiff, subject to defendant's objection that the evidence was not proper rebuttal, was permitted to show by his surveyor, F.H. Dewart, from measurements made by him during the trial that the wing, which one of defendant's witnesses testified the truck went off was 4 feet lower than the crown of the highway; that the highway opposite the wing was flat and continued so for a little more than a foot west of the traveled track, and then dropped suddenly to the bed of the side log; that 10 to 12 feet south of the bridge the ground "drops down abruptly" about 2 1/2 feet, with a less drop farther to the south; that at the time the witness visited the locus on July 11, 1923, the west log had not been shoved "endways" as testified to by defendant's witness, but did show indications of having been hit on the east side. We think this evidence was clearly admissible. It manifestly tended to show the improbability, to say nothing of the impossibility, of the truck reaching the bridge without tipping over if it followed the course indicated by defendant's evidence; and we have discovered nothing, nor has anything been called to our attention, to indicate that this subject was opened up by the plaintiff in chief. While the order of evidence is largely discretionary with the trial court, the record seems to indicate that this evidence was admitted because strictly rebuttal in character, and we think properly so.
Judgment affirmed.