Lunney v. Inhabitants of Shapleigh
Lunney v. Inhabitants of Shapleigh
Opinion of the Court
This is an action on the case brought by Everett C. Lunney against the Inhabitants of the Town of Shapleigh for dam,
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant, after verdict against it, asks this Court to set aside the verdict, and to-grant a new trial, because there is no basis for such a verdict against it, and must have been the result of prejudice, passion, partiality, and bias on the part of the jury.
We have examined the evidence in this report carefully and find it a case peculiarly adapted to the judgment of men who are familiar with country roads in the winter time and particularly with the manner in which the country cross-roads, and little used roads, are treated by the town authorities. While each case brought under this statute is to be decided upon the evidence, touching the particular conditions involved, yet, the weight of that evidence and its application to the conditions, are subject to interpretation through the experience and knowledge of the jurymen who are acquainted with the methods with which these roads are treated. Applying this rule we think the jury, who understood in a general way the local conditions, were more'capable than this court can possibly be, by reading the report, of balancing the bulky and conflicting testimony, and determining the merits of the contradictions. While the case might have been decided either way, we are yet inclined to the opinion that the jury were not altogether wrong. There are certain admitted facts throughout the evidence which rather tend to show that this piece of road was not broken out in compliance with the statute under which the action is brought. This statute, it is evident, was enacted to
All these things, and many others which appear in the testimony, furnish fairly good evidence to those acquainted with country roads and the method of breaking them, that this piece of road was actually in a pretty bad condition, and fairly presented to the jury for determination the question, whether it was so bad as to come within the meaning of the statute, under a fair, clear and discriminating charge given by the presiding Justice. They said it did, and gave a small verdict to the plaintiff. It cannot be regarded as excessive. We do not feel required to set it aside.
Motion overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Everett C. Lunney v. Inhabitants of Shapleigh
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published