62 A. 218 | N.H. | 1905
The question before the court is, whether the steps where the plaintiff was injured were a "dangerous embankment and defective railing" within the meaning of section 1, chapter 59, Laws 1893, as interpreted in Wilder v. Concord,
The office of the rail required by the law, as it stood prior to the passage of the act of 1893, seems to have been to guard the traveler from going or falling over an embankment or precipice, or into a hole, or from going against an obstruction, located upon the side of the traveled path or very near to it. A town then might be, and still may be, fined for neglect to cause a dangerous embankment or causeway in a highway to be securely railed. P. S., c. 75, s. 1. Under the former statute rendering towns liable to travelers for injuries caused by defects in highways, it was held that the absence of a railing would be a defect if the railing was reasonably necessary to prevent travelers from going into a hole (Willey v. Portsmouth,
Exception overruled.
All concurred. *362