Johnson v. Town of Irasburgh

47 Vt. 28
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 47 Vt. 28 (Johnson v. Town of Irasburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Town of Irasburgh, 47 Vt. 28 (Vt. 1874).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ross, J.

The necessity which will excuse one for travelling on the Sabbath must be a real and not a fancied necessity. The statute reads, “ No person shall travel on the Sabbath or first day of the week, except from necessity or charity.” Gen. Sts. ch. 93, § 3. It is not an honest belief that a necessity for travelling exists, but the actual existence of the necessity, which renders travelling on the Sabbath lawful. Hence, the court properly refused to instruct the jury as requested by the plaintiff. The jury, under proper instructions, have found that the travelling of the plaintiff on the occasion when he received the injury, was not from necessity, and therefore unlawful. They have also found that he has suffered damage from injuries received by reason of the insufficiency of a highway which it was the duty of the town to keep in good and sufficient repair. On this verdict the defendant moved for judgment in its favor, which the court below, pro forma, overruled, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff, against the exception of the defendant. Thus the question is distinctly presented for decision, whether a town is liable for damages sustained through the insufficiency of a highway which it is legally bound to keep in repair, to one who is unlawfully travelling on such highway, or travelling on the Sabbath without a legal excuse. The question is not, whether the plaintiff is barred from recovering damages which he would otherwise be entitled to recover, because he was, at the time he received the injury, committing an unlawful act, or travelling at an unlawful rate of speed, but whether the town was under a legal duty to furnish him a safe highway to travel over, when, at that precise time, he was forbidden by law to travel over the highway. This precise question is now for the first time presented to this court for decision. In Abbott v. Wolcott, 38 Vt. 666, a question somewhat analogous was decided. The plaintiff in that case was injured from the [33]*33springing of a bridge while he was trotting his horse upon it. The bridge was of such construction that, by law, the plaintiff was forbidden to drive faster than a walk thereon. The plaintiff might lawfully travel on the bridge, but not at the rate of speed he used. It was held he could not recover.- The decision is put upon two grounds: first, that the plaintiff’s illegal act in driving faster than a walk must have contributed to the springing of the bridge, and so contributed to the happening of the accident which caused the injury; second, if this was not so, that inasmuch as it was conceded that “ the bridge was good and sufficient, except in the matter of its springing when driven upon on the trot,” and as the plaintiff had no right to use it in that manner, the town was under no legal obligation to provide a bridge for such use; in other words, that the town had fully discharged its duty towards the plaintiff, in that it had provided as good a bridge as the law required, and that the accident happened and the injury was occasioned by the unlawful act of the plaintiff, or of one Carlysle, who was at the time also trotting his horse $n the bridge, and not from any failure of the town to discharge its duty in the premises. The question at bar has arisen in other states, but the courts of those states have not been so fortunate as to arrive at the same solution of it. The courts of Massachusetts and Maine have repeatedly decided that a plaintiff could not recover under such circumstances. Janes v. Andover, 10 Allen, 18; Bosworth v. Swanzey, 10 Met. 353; Hinckley v. Penobscot, 42 Me. 89; Bryant v. Biddeford, 59 Me. 193 In some of the other states it has been held that the fact that the plaintiff was travelling on the Sabbath in violation of law, did not relieve the town from its liability for damages sustained through the insufficiency of its highway. So far as I have had access to such decisions, they assume that the town was liable to the plaintiff for the insufficiency of its highway, and proceed to consider whether the unlawful act of the plaintiff relieved the town from such liability. Sutton v. Waunatosa, 29 Wis. 21, is one of the latest decided cases of this kind, and one on which the plaintiff especially relies. It therefore demands some consideration. In the opinion, which was delivered by Ch. [34]*34J. Dixon, very many of the oases are reviewed. It assumes that the decision of the cases against the right of the plaintiff to recover, rests either upon the ground that the plaintiff’s illegal act of travelling on the Sabbath contributed to the happening of the accident, and for that reason deprived him of the right of recovery, or that the fact that he was engaged in an unlawful act at the time he received the injury, bars his right of action. Both of these grounds are combatted earnestly, and, I think, successfully. It is difficult to maintain that the traveller’s illegal act in such cases contributed to the happening of the accident. The insufficiency of the highway remaining the same, and the traveller being at the place of the insufficiency under the same circumstances on any other day of the week, the same accident and injury would have befallen him. A contributory cause is one which, under the same circumstances, would always be an element aiding in the production of the accident. The fact that the traveller is unlawfully at the place of the accident, does not contribute to the overturn of his carriage or to the^production of the accident. The same forces and causes would have overturned the carriage or caused the accident as well on a week day as on the Sabbath; as well when the traveller w^ lawfully at the place of the accident as when unlawfully there. It is sometimes asserted that if the injured party had not been unlawfully travelling he would not have been at the place of insufficiency, and would not have received the injury. The same is true of all injuries on highways. The injured person must be present at the place of the accident in order to receive the injury. Whether he is lawfully or unlawfully there, when there, the same causes and forces produce the accident in the one case, as in the other; and the fact that the injured one is present unlawfully, is not a factor which contributes to the happening of the accident. Hence, the decisions against the traveller’s right of recovery must rest upon some other basis than that his unlawful act, or travelling unlawfully, was a contributory cause to the happening of the accident within the legal meaning ordinarily attached to those words. Neither, as I think, can the fact that the party receiving the injury, was, at the time of the injury, engaged in an- unlawful act, deprive him of the [35]*35right of recovery. If the plaintiff, at the time of the injury, had been profaning the name of Deity, he would have been engaged in an unlawful act; but no one would hold that such an act would bar him from recovering of the town if it were otherwise liable for the injury sustained. The town could not relieve itself from the consequences of its own wrong or neglect, by alleging the illegal act of the plaintiff. Punishments are provided for all unlawful acts, but their administration is not committed to the discretion of towns; neither has a town the right to add to the prescribed penalty the injuries resulting from its own wrongful act or neglect. The travelling by the plaintiff without excuse, on the Sabbath, was not an offense against the town, and it cannot excuse its wrong done to him, if wrong it be, by recrimination.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Vt. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-town-of-irasburgh-vt-1874.