Action to recover damages for an injury to the plaintiff’s sleigh, by reason of a snow-drift upon the highway of the defendants.
*104There was evidence in the case, that there was a pile of cedar lying outside the turnpiked portion of the road, but within the limits of the highway, and a pile of cord wood on the shoulder of the road, extending some four feet into the travelled part of it. It further appeared in evidence that a snow-drift was formed, extending from the pile of cedar to the wood pile, and thence across the road.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff requested the court to instruct the jury that if those deposits of wood and cedar caused the drift, and the drift caused the injury, the wood and cedar were defects for which the town would be liable, and that the road must be safe and convenient for travellers.
The justice presiding refused to give the requested instruction, but instructed the jury that if the drift directly caused the injury, and the wood and cedar merely contributed to the formation of the drift the week before, they should not consider the wood and cedar in the case, and that the town would not in any way be responsible in this action for their being there.
The burden was upon the plaintiff to prove, not the cause, but the existence of the defect.' With the former he had nothing to do; his right to maintain this action did not depend, in any respect, upon the cedar and wood-pile. If the snow-drift which was there constituted a defect, and alone caused the injury, the rights, duties and liabilities of the town in respect to it would be the same whether the cedar and wood-pile contributed to produce it or not. The law in such cases regards proximate, not remote causes. The sleigh did not come in contact with the wood-pile, but with the snowdrift which was the proximate cause, if cause it was, of the injury. The justice presiding, therefore, properly refused to give the first branch of the requested instruction, and gave other appropriate instructions.
But the counsel for the plaintiff further requested the court to instruct the jury, that the road must be safe and convenient for the public travel. This request was not complied with, but they were instructed that if the defendants had complied with R. S., c. 18, *105§ 46, they were not liable under the fortieth section of the same chapter.
Section 46 provides that where the ways within the limits of a highway surveyor are blocked up or incumbered with snow, he shall forthwith cause so much of it to be removed or trodden down, as will render them “passable.” Section 40 requires that highways townways and streets, legally established, shall be opened and kept in repair so that they are safe and convenient for travellers with horses, teams and carriages. Section 65 of the same chapter gives a party who receives any injury to his person, or suffers any damage in his property through any defect or want of repair in any highway, a right of action against- the town obliged by law to repair the same.
Section 46 was not intended to operate as a substitute for, or a repeal of section 40 in the specified class of cases, nor to exempt towns from the liability imposed by section 65. The duty of towns “to keep their highways safe and convenient” is not conditioned upon the performance or non-performance by the surveyor of highways of the duty imposed upon him by section 46, but it is imperative. The provision in section 46 is a precautionary measure to prevent travellers from being subjected to nnnecessary inconvenience and delay by reason of the way remaining impassable from a specified cause; -not to shield the town from liability when it allows the way, though “passable,” ,to remain defective, unsafe and inconvenient. It is not enough that towns make their ways passable ; they may be passable when they can only be used by the exercise of extraordinary care which is a higher degree of care than the law requires. Eew ways are absolutely impassable at any season of the year. Highways are not only to be made and kept “passable,” but they must be so “passable” that travellers may use them with safety and convenience by the exercise of ordinary care. The terms “safe and convenient” and “passable” are not synonymous ; it is obvious that a highway may be passable, and at the same time, not safe and convenient. The requested instruction that “the road must be safe and convenient for the public travel” *106contains a principle of law strictly applicable to tbe issue, and should have been given. Exceptions sustained.
Walton and Peters, JJ., concurred. Barrows and Danforth, JJ., concurred in the result. Appleton, C. J., and Cutting, J., did not concur.