Vosburgh v. Moak

Dewey, J.

The liability of Payar Hollenbeck, one of the defendants, does not seem to have been questioned in the prayer for instructions, but the court was asked to instruct the jury, as to the other defendants, that under a certain state of facts assumed by the defendant’s counsel, they ought not to be charged in this action. To decide upon this question, however, it becomes necessary to look at the facts as found or admitted in the case, as applicable to all the parties, and the nature of their associated action.

All the defendants were engaged in a game of wicket on a public highway of four rods in width, and three of which were the travelled path. The plaintiff was travelling on the highway in a wagon, with his wife. The plaintiff was in the lawful occupation of the road, and had a right to pass thereon, free from any obstruction, or any exposure to casualties from those occupying the highway for purposes other than passing thereon. The defendants were using the highway for a purpose foreign from the appropriate use of the same. Whether the occupation of a portion of the highway by persons engaged in a game of wicket would necessarily and under all circumstances be a nuisance and punishable as such, it is not necessary now to consider. It is enough that the act of the parties associated in such game upon a public highway becomes illegal, when it endangers the safety of persons actually travelling upon such road. The highway is established for the convenience of travellers, and the use of *456.it fot any game or sport, that actually exposes or puts ta hazard the personal safety of the traveller thereon, is not justifiable, and subjects the party thus using the road improperly, to the payment of all damages occasioned thereby to the traveller. The limits of this road, the amount of travel thereon, the nature of the game, and the circumstances under which the plaintiff received the injury, show a clear case of liability on the part of the person, by whose immediate agency the injury was occasioned. The injury was direct, and was properly the subject of an action for trespass. The further inquiry then is, were all the associates in this game of wicket jointly liable for this trespass? If liable at all, they were liable in trespass, as they were present and engaged in the game when the injury was inflicted. The ground taken in defence is, .that if this injury resulted from an accidental misdirection of the ball in the hands of one of the players, the others ought not to be responsible therefor. It may be difficult, in some cases, to define the line with entire satisfaction, as to the cases, where an association or many persons are engaged in a common object, and an injury is inflicted by one individual, without intentional concurrence on the part of the others, or even without intention on the part of the individual who inflicts the injury, and yet the whole number engaged in the common object be liable jointly for the damages sustained by the injured party. However that may be, we think no difficulty exists in the present case. The rule as stated by the presiding judge was stated with entire accuracy and under proper limitations.

The ruling of the court embraced the following requisites or facts necessary to be established before the jury should return a verdict against the defendants as joint trespassers: 1st. It must be shown that the parties were engaged in a common pursuit of a game at wicket on the public highway. 2d. That the game was of such a character, that from the width of the road and the number of persons usually passing thereon, it would endanger persons travelling on the publ.c highway. These instructions would require that the plaintiff *457should satisfy the jury, that the defendants had entered upon a common pursuit of dangerous tendency, which might result in an injury to one using the highway for the ordinary purpose of travel. 3d. The further instruction was, that it was also necessary to charge the defendants, that the individual who threw the ball, which occasioned the injury, should have been acting in the usual manner of persons engaged in the game of wicket. We think these elements all that were necessary to constitute a joint liability, and to render all those engaged in the common object joint trespassers.

Exceptions overruled.