Judges: Mayham
Filed Date: 12/8/1892
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The defendant constructed a barbed-wire fence on. ■or along the public highway, and while the plaintiff’s servant was leading two young horses, attached together by one strap or halter, behind a buggy in which he was riding, they became frightened, and ran •against this fence, and one was seriously injured, for which this action was brought:
The complaint alleged that the defendant was the owner of certain premises and real estate therein described, along which, for more than 20 years, a public highway had been kept and used, which had been duly laid out as such, and was four rods wide, and charged that the defendant had erected and maintained a nuisance in" such highway, in the construction of a barbed-wire fence, by which the plaintiff’s horse was injured. The answer denied that the fence was in the highway, and alleges that the same was greeted with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff, and charges that the injury to plaintiff’s horse was the result of the negligence of the plaintiff’s servant. • On the trial the plaintiff put in evidence the records of an order made by two of the commissioners of highways of the town, dated September 9,1826, purporting to lay out this highway as of the width of four rods. This order was objected to by the defendant, on the ground that it purported to have been made by two, instead of three, commissioners of highways of that town, and contained no recital or other evidence that notice of the meeting of the
At the conclusion of. the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant moved for a nonsuit, and that the plaintiff’s complaint be dismissed, on the grounds (1) that it appears from the evidence that the accident was-caused by the negligent and careless manner in which plaintiff’s, horse was held, and not caused by the fence at all; (2) that the plaintiff has failed to prove the fact that this fence was in the highway, or, if it was in the highway, caused the injury, or that it would not have occurred if it had been several feet further back; (3) that the plaintiff has failed to prove facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Plaintiff asked to have the case submitted to the jury for determination. The court granted the motion, intimating that the action ought to have been one for negligence, and that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and for that reason ought not to go to the jury, and dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint, to which the plaintiff duly accepted.
In determining whether this nonsuit was properly granted, we are to-give full weight to all the evidence offered and received on the part of the plaintiff, and assume that, if the jury had found in accordance with, it, the verdict, as matter of law, could not be upheld, (Weaver v. White, [Sup.] 19 N. Y. Supp. 616,) and that the facts which the plaintiff’s evidence established, or tended to establish, were found in his favor. The road in question, therefore, being conceded to be a public highway, there was some evidence on the part of the plaintiff that the wire fence-, was two feet further in the highway than the old fence, which had inclosed the highway for more than 20 years before the erection of the wire fence, and this evidence on the question of nonsuit must be construed in the most favorable light for the plaintiff. If, therefore, we should adopt the contention of the defendant that the order of the commissioners laying out this road was void for the reason that it does not. appear that the third commissioner was notified of the meeting of the commissioners to make the same, still we would have a public highway by user and adoption by the commissioners, and worked by them as such, to the extent of the user indicated by the location of the old fence, as the same was proved by the plaintiff to have existed for 20 years,, and as to which the wire fence was an encroachment; and the question whether that encroachment was a nuisance from which the plaintiff’s, horse was injured was, we think, one for the jury, and the reiusal of the learned judge to send it to the jurjr was error.
Having reached a conclusion that this case should have been submitted to the jury, it is unnecessary to examine the numerous other questions raised on this appeal. There must be a new trial of the action, costs to abide the event. All concur.