97 Me. 519 | Me. | 1903
While the plaintiff was being driven by her husband in an open wagon drawn by one horse along one of the public streets of Lewiston, the wheels upon one side of the carriage came in' contact with, and went onto, an obstruction in the street, so that the carriage was overturned, the plaintiff, as well as her husband, thrown out and she sustained some bodily injury. In the trial of the action to recover damages for the injuries sustained by reason of the alleged defective condition of the street, the plaintiff recovered a verdict. The case comes here upon the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The defective condition complained of was a quantity of earth taken from an excavation made for the purpose of obtaining connection with the public sewer, and left upon the side of the street. The pile of earth was estimated to be about four feet in height at the highest place and extended for several feet from the curbing into the street. It was to some extent guarded by at least one barrel and perhaps by some boards or planks, but upon the evening of the accident there was no lantern placed at the obstruction.
The accident occurred at about nine o’clock in the evening of the twenty-fourth of September; at the time, the moon, nearly full, was shining very brightly, there was no cloud in the sky to obstruct the moonlight, so that objects in the street could be seen for a considerable distance. All the witnesses upon both sides agree that it was an especially clear and bright night. The street at this point was about fifty-four feet wide with a street car track nearly in the center. The horse that the plaintiff’s husband was driving was wholly blind, so that it had to be entirely guided by the driver.
Under these circumstances, we think that it necessarily follows that the negligence of the driver contributed in some degree to the accident. In driving a blind horse, which has to be entirely guided by the driver, a great degree of care is required. In this case, the plaintiff’s husband could not have failed to see the pile of earth, with the barrel or barrels about it, if he had exercised such a degree of care as the occasion demanded. The fact that he did not see the obstruction, upon his side of the street, in the very bright moonlight, is almost conclusive evidence that he was not looking, although it was especi
Motion granted. Verdict set aside. '