Action to recover damages for injuries sustained by reason of an alleged defect in highway in defendant town. The case *192comes up on exceptions to an order of nonsuit for want of evidence of due care on the part of the driver. We think the order was right. The presiding justice would have been warranted in finding that the evidence, such as it was, showed affirmatively and unmistakably a want of due care by the driver. The alleged defect consisted in wliat is called in the case a “hole” beside the road, not. more than thirty feet from the plaintiff’s house. A drain pipe had been laid alongside the road on the same side and in front of the plaintiff’s house, terminating about thirty feet distant therefrom. The ditch in which the pipe lay was filled about to the level of the road, nearly as far as the end of the pipe. From this point, the ditch, unfilled, three feet deep and four feet wide, extended still further. The embankment where the fill ended was nearly perpendicular. The plaintiff claimed and testified that tall grass on the side of the road had “grown right out straight” over the ditch, so that the precise edge of the hole, or end of the ditch, was somewhat obscured or “blind.” Between the ditch and the traveled portion of the way was a strip of grass ground, two feet wide, at the end of the ditch. Then- widening it extended from the end of the ditch past the front door of plaintiff’s house, between the sidewalk and traveled way. At the end of the ditch the traveled way was twenty-one and a half feet wide, between the grass strip and the shoulder of the electric railway bed bn the other side of the road. Some time previously, a water pipe had been laid in the street at a distance varying from seven to nine feet from the edge of the ditch containing the drain pipe, it being the longer distance at the end of the drain pipe. When the ditch for the water pipe was refilled, earth was left somewhat above the level of the road. At the time of the accident it had not completely settled, and there still remained a ridge or “mound,” as the plaintiff calls it, two or three feet wide at the bottom, rounding over, and three inches high in the middle. This ridge extended to a point in front of the plaintiff’s house. Otherwise the traveled way was level and smooth.
On the day in question, the plaintiff and her sister-in-law, Mrs. Perry, with two small children of the latter, had driven out with a team to make some calls. Mrs. Perry drove, and the plaintiff sat *193upon the left side of the wagon, holding one child in her lap, with her arm around the other. On their return, they stopped a moment in front of the plaintiff’s house, the off wheel standing on the grass strip between the sidewalk and traveled way. They then started to make another call. They drove along in the direction of .the ditch or “hole,” thirty feet distant. Mrs. Perry drove so far to the right that the off wheel all the time kept on the grass, and the measured distances show that the horse, if not on the grass, must have traveled close to the line between the grass and the traveled way. As Mrs. Perry was sitting on the right hand side of the wagon, the ditch was directly in front of her and even if it was “blind” at the “hole” by reason of the grass, it was clearly in sight a few feet further on, as the photographs in the case show. Nevertheless she drove “right straight on,” turning neither to the right nor left, and when the off wheel reached the hole it dropped in and the plaintiff was thrown out and somewhat injured. It was clearly a case of “thoughtless inattention” on the part of the driver. Tasker v. Farmingdale, 85 Maine, 523. Had she used her eyes and her mind, she could not have failed to see that they were approaching a ditch, a dangerous place. She must have known she was in' the line of the ditch, and must turn to the road in order to avoid getting into the ditch. Common prudence would have suggested that course. No other inference is admissible. If she did not know exactly where the ditch began, — and as to this there is no evidence, — there was all the more need of her giving careful attention to where she was driving, if she chose to drive towards a place of apparent danger.
Besides she was driving out of the traveled part of the way. Towns have fully performed their duties to the traveling public when they have constructed and maintained wrought ways of reasonable width and smoothness. If the driver chose, without reasonable cause, to drive outside such a way, she did it at her own risk and the risk of the plain tiff, and not at the risk of the town. No reason appears in this case to justify the driver in guiding, if she did guide, her horse so far to the right of the road. The little ridge of earth, three inches high, left when the water pipe was laid, was not an obstruction. It was hardly an inconvenience. It could be easily *194crossed and recrossed. It presented no difficulty. • But had it been otherwise, there was sufficient room to drive between the ridge of earth and the grass. And on the other side of the road was a clear space eleven or twelve feet wide, between the ridge and the electric railway. . There was no apparent justification for driving outside the wrought portion of the road.
In Mosher v. Smithfield, 84 Maine, 844, plaintiff failed to hold a verdict merely because there was no evidence, one way or the other, as to the care of the driver. The circumstances were as consistent with one theory as with the other. For it is the law in this state that a town is not liable in a case like this unless its fault was the sole cause of the injury. And it is incumbent upon a plaintiff to prove affirmatively, not only that no want of due care on his own part contributed to the injury, but likewise that there was none on the part of the driver, if any. Gleason v. Bremen, 50 Maine, 222, Mosher v. Smithfield, supra. This is a stronger case for the defendant than Mosher v. Smithfield, for, as we have already said, the circumstances here show affirmatively that want of due care on the part of the driver, did contribute to the injury. And they show it so clearly and unmistakably, that no other inference or conclusion is warrantable. The ruling of the court was therefore right.
But had it been otherwise, the case presents another insuperable obstacle to recovery by the plaintiff, and that is the plaintiff’s own want of ordinary care. Though this ground was not made a basis for the ruling below, it is proper to consider it here, for it is a wise rule of the law that exceptions will not be sustained in any event, if the excepting party must ultimately fail upon the undisputed facts. Matthews v. Fisk, 64 Maine, 101; Farnsworth Co. v. Rand, 65 Maine, 19.
The entire evidence offered by the plaintiff is made a part of the bill of exceptions. It shows that plaintiff had known of the1 existence of the hole and its general location for at least six years, though she says she did not know precisely where the edge of it was, on account of the long grass. She could see the mouth of the drain from her windows. She testified that she knew the hole was “a dangerous place.” Two months previous she had notified the mayor *195that it was a dangerous place, and watched him while he examined it. And yet, with all this knowledge, she permitted Mrs. Perry at the time of the accident to “drive right straight along” into the hole, without a word of suggestion or expostulation, without a hint to the driver of the danger known to the plaintiff, without any effort to save herself or prevent the injury. She was clearly lacking in that care and thoughtfulness which was due to the occasion. Had she used her knowledge as she ought to have done, no injury would have occurred. Her own want of due care contributed to the injury.
Exceptions overruled.