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Scottish Jury Court Reports |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Jury Court Reports >> Maclachlan v. Road Trustees. [1827] ScotJCR 4_Murray_216 (14 June 1827) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotJCR/1827/4_Murray_216.html Cite as: [1827] ScotJCR 4_Murray_216 |
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Page: 216↓
(1827) 4 Murray 216
CASES TRIED IN THE JURY COURT, AT EDINBURGH, AND ON THE CIRCUIT, FROM DECEMBER 1825 TO JULY 1828.
No. 30
PRESENT, LORDS CHIEF COMMISSIONER,
Damages against road trustees for injury suffered through their fault or negligence.
An action of damages against road-trustees for injury done to the pursuer by the overturn of his gig.
Defence.—If any one is liable for the damages, it is not the defenders, but Lord Stair. But the pursuer caused the damage by his rashness and inattention.
“It being admitted that the defender is clerk to the road trustees for the county of Wigton, and that the road from Portpatrick to the town of Stranraer, in the said county,
Page: 217↓
It being also admitted, that, on the 11th day of February 1826, the pursuer, while travelling in a gig, was overturned in the immediate neighbourhood of the said town of Stranraer,—
Whether the said overturn was caused by the fault or negligence of the said trustees, and was to the injury and damage of the pursuer?”
Marshall, for the pursuer.—This is a claim for reparation of an injury caused by the culpable negligence of the defenders in not shutting up an old road. Their liability is clear under the 63d section of the road act for the county.
Jeffrey, for the defenders.—The defenders act gratuitously, and so are only liable for fault. The facts are simple. The only difficulty is in the conclusion to be drawn from them. It was agreed, that the old road should be the property of Lord Stair, from the time it was shut up; and the contractor was bound to shut it up, and did shut it up by a strong paling, which stood for fifteen months. The road had not been under the management of the trustees for
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Rutherford, 11 East. 65. 2 Taunt. 314.
Competent to prove admissions made by a party, provided they were not made with a view to a submission of the case to arbitration.
When a letter from the pursuer's agent was produced,
Lord Chief Commissioner.—A transaction with a view to a submission cannot be given in evidence; and I should be sorry if the Court admitted any thing of this nature. You cannot give in evidence any thing with a view to an arbitration, or a decision of the question out of Court; but if, without any such view, a party makes admissions even verbally, they might be proved at the trial.
Smythe v. Pentland. See Fac. Col. 10th July 1813.
After looking at the letter, The Lord Chief Commissioner said, it was a letter with a view to a compromise, and could not be read; but Mr Cockburn having obtained the opinion of the Court, consented to the letter being read.
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Lord Chief Commissioner.—The Bar deserve much credit for their conduct relative to the extrajudicial settlement of cases; and we would be sorry to do any thing that might tend to impede such settlement. If called to decide this, we must have rejected the letter, but are much better satisfied to have it read of consent.
Cockburn, in reply.—Though the trustees act gratuitously, they undertake a duty, and having undertaken it, they are bound to fulfil it. The pursuer's case is clear, and the only question is on the defence. By stating that they took the contractor bound to shut this road, they admit that it ought to have been shut; but what occurred proved that it was open. There is no evidence that the pursuer knew that the road was shut up; and as to furious driving, he does not appear to have been going faster than the mail.
Lord Chief Commissioner.—This is a case of importance to the parties. To the pursuer, that he should get redress for the injury he has suffered; and to the trustees, who are individually liable, and have no fund from which to pay the damages, if found due. They have no interest in the roads, farther than residing
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The issue is most clear and accurate, and under it there are two matters for consideration. Whether the trustees discharged their duty in protecting the public travelling on these roads; for if they did the pursuer has mistaken his party. 2. Whether they remained responsible at the date of the accident, and whether, under all the circumstances, the pursuer is entitled to damages. The evidence shows that the intention was to shut up the road on which the pursuer was overturned, and that a strong paling was put up for this purpose, and you are to say whether it remained in such a degree of preservation as that this road was shut up. Any evidence of a transaction between the trustees and Lord Stair as to the property of the old road cannot affect the pursuer. But the important consideration here
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It was correctly stated that in every case of this sort there are two ingredients. There must be fault in the party setting up an obstruction on the road, or omitting to set up an obstruction to prevent danger; and there must, on the other side, be in the main, ordinary care and attention. If there is any unfitness or impropriety in the party injured, or if, by usual care and attention, the injury would have been avoided, then the party putting, or omitting to put, the obstruction is not liable. The person claiming must come with clean hands; and if he has been acting in a careless, irregular, and extraordinary manner, and not regularly and carefully, and in the usual manner in the circumstances in which he is placed, the other party is not liable to repair the injury he has suffered. You will consider whether the pursuer
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On the whole, you will consider whether the trustees remained liable up to the date of the accident, and whether the pursuer acted in such a manner as to entitle him to claim damages.
Verdict—For the pursuer, damages, L. 21.
Counsel:
Cockburn and Marshall, for the pursuer.
Jeffrey and Shaw, for the defenders.
Solicitors: (Agents R. Matthew and Vans Hathorn.)