Cunningham v. Inhabitants of Frankfort

70 A. 441, 104 Me. 208, 1908 Me. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 9, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 A. 441 (Cunningham v. Inhabitants of Frankfort) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cunningham v. Inhabitants of Frankfort, 70 A. 441, 104 Me. 208, 1908 Me. LEXIS 32 (Me. 1908).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff on the nineteenth day of August, 1905, by reason of an alleged defect in a highway which the defendants were obliged by law to maintain and keep in repair. In the plaintiff’s declaration the accident is alleged to have occurred on "a certain public highway leading from the road which leads from Black’s Corner in Searsport to Frankfort Marsh, about one-third of a mile westerly from the dwelling house of Charles Robinson and at the four corners of the road,” and the defect is described as "a large rock in the travelled part of said way protruding about eighteen inches above the ground or top of the road and in the wheel track of the road.” With respect to the cause of the accident, the declaration further states that the plaintiff was riding along this road with his son-in-law Adelbert Small, in a top-buggy drawn by one horse, when the wheel of the carriage came in contact with the rock described and the carriage was thereby overturned, causing a fracture of the plaintiff Is left leg and the other injuries of which he complains.

In the notice given by the plaintiff to the municipal officers of the defendant town on the 28th day of August, eight days after the accident, the defect is described as a "large rock in the traveled part of the highway, about eighteen inches thick,” without stating that it was protruding above the ground or top of the road” as was alleged in the declaration. It also satisfactorily appeared from the evidence that the rock was not actually in the traveled part of the way. The defendant further claimed that the plaintiff’s description of the location of the rock in both the declaration and the notice, was inaccurate in stating it to be at the "four corners, a third of a mile westerly from the house of Charles Robinson,” since it appeared from the evidence that the direction of the "four corners” where the accident occurred is not in fact "westerly” from the house of Charles Robinson, but north 35 degrees east from his house. It is also shown by the evidence that there are two other crossings of the ways making "four corners” at two other points north-westerly from the [211]*211house of Charles Robinson, and at such a distance therefrom that either of the last mentioned four corners would correspond more nearly with the description contained in the notice, than the four corners where the accident happened. It was accordingly contended by the defendant that there was a fatal variance between the notice and the evidence respecting both the nature and location of the defect. But for the purposes of the trial the presiding Justice instructed the jury that the notice contained a sufficient description of the nature and location of the defect, and was sufficient in law to enable the plaintiff to maintain his action under the evidence introduced. To this ruling the defendant took exceptions.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of one thousand dollars, and the case comes to the Law Court on exceptions to the ruling of the presiding Justice holding the notice sufficient, and on a motion to set aside the verdict as against the law and the evidence.

To maintain his actiop against the defendant town, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff after proving the notices required by statute to prove affirmatively that the highway was not safe and convenient for travelers at the point where the accident occurred ; that no want of ordinary care on his part contributed to cause the accident and that his injury was occasioned through the defect alone.

Section 56 of chapter 23, R. S., declares that "highways, town ways and streets, legally established shall be opened and kept in repair so as to be safe and convenient for travelers,” etc., and section 76 of the same chapter provides that "whoever receives any bodily injury, or suffers damage in his property, through any defect or want of repair ... in any highway . ' . . may recover for the same in a special action on the case.” These two sections were clearly intended to be in harmony with each other and counterparts of the same enactment. They have always been construed to mean that a plaintiff is entitled to recover damage only when he suffers it through any defect or want of repair that will prevent the way from being safe and convenient for travel.

Thus the only measure of duty prescribed by the statute and the only test of liability created by it, will be found in the requirement [212]*212that the way shall be kept "safe and convenient for travelers.” But in the practical application of the statute to the highways of the State, it has been uniformly held by this court that the words safe and convenient are not to be construed to mean entirely and absolutely safe and convenient but reasonably safe and convenient in view of the circumstances of each particular case. They are considered to be relative terms and the question of safety and convenience must be determined with reference to the special facts and conditions existing in each case, such as the location of the way, the nature and extent of the travel to be accommodated and all the circumstances which may reasonably influence the conclusion. A condition that might readily be accepted as reasonably safe and convenient on a crossroad in a country town, might be grossly unsafe for an important thoroughfare that is in constant use for public travel. A condition of perfect safety beyond the possibility of an accident is of course unattainable; a condition of reasonable safety only is required. Towns are not made insurers against accident and injury on the highway. The statute does .not impose upon them the obligation to guarantee the safety of public travel within their limits. And the question is not whether in a given case the town used ordinary care and diligence in the construction and maintenance of the way; but whether as a result the way as constructed and maintained was in fact reasonably safe and convenient ■ for travelers.

The methods of constructing and repairing public ways are necessarily determined in the first instance by the officers of the town to whom that duty is committed, but whether the result fulfills the requirement of the statute is a question which must ultimately be passed upon by the court and jury when it arises. Moriarty v. Lewiston, 98 Maine, 482. "A defect such as the statutes contemplates must be something which unlawfully impairs the reasonable safety and convenience of the way.” Bartlett v. Kittery, 68 Maine, 358.

The highway in question in the case at bar, upon which the plaintiff was traveling in going from Belfast to Mosquito Mountain, is a country road with bnt little travel upon it, being chiefly used [213]*213by the workmen going to and returning from their work at the granite quarry. It appears to have been constructed more than fifty years ago, and in the process of building at the four corners in question some rocks were evidently removed and deposited upon the right hand side as the traveler passes around the curve from one road to the other in the direction in which the plaintiff was traveling when he received his injuries. These rocks have never been moved since the road was built.' It is a matter of common observation that it is the natural tendency of travel in turning the corner of a highway, to swerve toward the outside of the road and that granite posts or guides are frequently erected to prevent it. It is undoubtedly true that the result of this tendency was to bring the wheel track nearer the rocks in the- course of fifty years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 A. 441, 104 Me. 208, 1908 Me. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-inhabitants-of-frankfort-me-1908.