122 Mass. 491 | Mass. | 1877
We are all of opinion that too much weight was, at the trial, attached to the testimony of the plaintiff, that, “ when he entered the avenue, he understood, from seeing the horse and light across it, that the avenue was undergoing repairs, and was closed to travel, but that he supposed the repairs were on the road-bed only.”
It is undoubtedly true that the authorities of a city or town may temporarily close a highway against use, for the purpose of making repairs in the way, and escape liability to any person, who may attempt to use or use the same as a way, with knowledge that it is closed. Even if unnecessarily closed, if in fact closed, the remedy for such closing is by indictment, and no right of action accrues to an individual because of it. But, in order to relieve the municipality from liability, to a person sustaining injury by reason of his attempt to use it, it must be closed. What is sufficient to show that it is thus closed is a question of fact. The statute does not prescribe any particular mode of notifying the traveller that a way is closed. Nor is there any difference in this respect between different parts of the way; if the way is closed it is closed to all travel, as well on foot as by carriages or teams.
Whether what was done was sufficient to notify the traveller that the way was closed to travel was a question of fact for the jury, or, at least, a question so mixed of law and fact that it should have been submitted to the jury under proper instructions. This may depend upon a variety of circumstances: the situation of the way; the travel it was to accommodate; the