
    Joseph C. Hoffart, Respondent, v. The Town of West Turin, Appellant.
    
      Negligence — liability of a town for injury resulting from a horse being frightened by a stick of wood falling from a wood pile on the edge of a highway.
    
    Assuming that a pile of ordinary stove wood, two feet high and from seven to ten feet in diameter, lying from seven to ten or eleven feet from the edge of a little traveled country highway,' is calculated to frighten horses driven along the highway, and that the pile of wood has remained there long enough to charge the commissioner of highways with knowledge of its presence, the town is not liable for damages sustained by a person driving along the highway whose horse runs away in consequence of being frightened, not by the general aspect of the wood pile, but by the sudden and unexplained falling of a stick therefrom.
    Appeal by the defendant, The Town of West Turin, from a judg ment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Lewis on the 17th day of April, 1903, upon the verdict of a jury for $500, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 15th day of April, 1903, denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      
      C. S. Mereness, for the appellant.
    
      M. H. Powers, for the respondent.
   Hiscock, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff in September, 1901, through being thrown out of his wagon as he was driving upon a highway in the defendant town, and which accident resulted, as claimed, through his horse becoming frightened at a pile of wood upon the side of the highway and running away.

We think that the evidence taken in its entirety was not sufficient to charge defendant with liability, and that, therefore, the judgment should be reversed.

Upon the occasion in question plaintiff was driving a single horse hitched to a buggy in which were himself, his wife and three children. It was in the daytime, and his course lay over a country highway which was very little traveled, not to exceed two teams a day passing over it, even in the summer season. Some time before the accident an owner of land adjoining the highway had started to draw out some wood, and in the course of his operations had left a pile of ordinary stove wood, not to exceed two feet high and from seven to ten feet in diameter, at a distance variously estimated at from seven to ten or eleven feet from the edge of the highway. There were some cradle knolls and weeds by the side of the highway in the neighborhood of this pile of wood, and plaintiff claims that as he drove along he did not see the wood pile until his horse got opposite to it, when a stick or slab slipped down upon the pile and frightened the horse. It is to be noticed that plaintiff’s evidence makes it entirely distinct that the fright of the horse was caused by the sudden slipping of this stick, and that there was nothing to cause this sudden contingency, except, as plaintiff suggests, the jarring of the earth as he was driving his horse and buggy along an ordinary country highway several feet distant therefrom.

There was some evidence that this horse had run away before this, and that after the accident somebody led him back over the pile of wood without any struggles upon his part. There was also evidence which would have permitted a jury to say that three or four other horses, upon occasions prior to this accident, had shied at the pile of wood, but none of them had run away. There was evidence that the miles of highway in the town aggregated about seventy-five.

While it is somewhat difficult to believe that a small pile of ordinary stove wood would so frighten horses when properly driven that they would shy and run away, it was perhaps within the province of the jury to find that this particular pile of wood did possess these possibilities and that it was calculated to frighten horses. It was also permissible for the jury to find that the pile of wood had remained there long enough so that the commissioner of highways should have known of its presence. If, therefore, plaintiffs horse had simply taken fright at this pile of wood a,nd run away, we might have felt constrained to allow the verdict to stand. Such, however, is not the case presented upon this appeal. As stated, it clearly appears that plaintiff’s horse was frightened, not by the general aspect of the wood pile, but by the sudden and unexplained slipping and falling of a stick as he went by. It is suggested that plaintiff’s horse and wagon so jarred the earth that it shook down this stick, but we do not feel able to go to the extent of accepting this theory. It, therefore; follows that suddenly and without any sufficient explanation or cause as plaintiff was driving by, a stick of wood fell down and frightened his horse and caused the accident. "We think that this occurrence was so unusual that the commissioner of highways was not bound to anticipate it or guard against it. If the wood had been newly thrown into the pile it would be easier to understand the settling and falling of its component pieces. It had, however, lain there for weeks or months, and the alleged cause of plaintiff’s misfortune seems to have been something which could not be reasonably anticipated or foreseen.

For these reasons we think the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted.

All concurred.

Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide event, upon questions of law only, the facts having been examined and no error found therein.  