177 Mass. 87 | Mass. | 1900
This is an action for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by the plaintiff in consequence of a defect in the highway. At the trial the judge took the case from the jury, and the main question raised by the plaintiff’s exceptions is whether he was right in doing so. The place of the accident was at the corner of a sidewalk where two streets met. Under the corner was a semicircular hole in the side of the curbstone, of the shape familiar in our streets for an opening into a catch basin, and seven and one half inches high at its highest point. In front of this, on the main surface of the street, was an iron plate or lid, extending out twenty-five and three quarters inches
We shall assume without deciding that the notice sufficiently stated the cause of the injury. Grogan v. Worcester, 140 Mass. 227. But we are of opinion that the facts disclose no defect in the highway for which the city was responsible. The combination of the hole and the iron plate was familiar and proper by itself, and it was not necessary to guard the hole against the remote chance of such an accident as the present. Whether the hole contributed to the injury appears only by conjecture, but if it did, the risk of its playing such a part was too small to entitle the plaintiff to go to the jury on that alone. See Richardson v. Boston, 156 Mass. 145, 146; Scannal v. Cambridge, 163 Mass. 91, 94; Dayton v. Taylor, 62 Ohio St. 11. The city was not bound to light the street. Lyon v. Cambridge, 136 Mass. 419. Randall v. Eastern Railroad, 106 Mass. 276. Snow and water by themselves, without more, of course are not a defect. So that the question is narrowed to whether the presence of snow and water in deceptive form, in connection with the darkness, the plate, and the hole, constituted a defect when no one and no combination of less than all the constituents would have done so. We think that the deceptive powers of water are not sufficiently dangerous, even in this combination, to make the city liable. The possibility of there being too much snow and water in the streets for a few days in the winter time is like the possibility of smooth ice, an incident of the climate which it would be unreasonable to require the city to guard against except under circumstances of greater danger than the present. See Stanton v. Springfield, 12 Allen, 566.
An exception was taken to the exclusion of evidence of a
Exceptions overruled.