The question upon the answer to which this case depends is, whether the facts stated in the bill of exceptions show an injury from a defect or want of repair in the highway. The statute provides that highways shall be kept in repair at the expense of the town or city in which they are situated, so as to De safe and convenient for travellers; and that any person who rece yes or suffers bodily injury through a defect or want of repair in the highway may recover the amount of damage thereby sustained, in an action of tort against the city or town by law *320obliged to repair the same. Gen. Sts. c. 44, §§ 1, 22. These two sections, taken together, give the rule and measure of the liability of cities and towns. They are not liable for every defect or want of repair, nor for every object which makes the highway unsafe or inconvenient for travellers; but it must be both a defect or want of repair, and one which makes the highway unsafe or inconvenient; and the injury must be attributable to the defect or want of repair.
Anything in the state or condition of the highway, which renders it unsafe or inconvenient for ordinary travel, is a defect or want of repair. It may be a hole or trench, occasioned by imperfect laying out and working of the road-bed or by travel, by the act of public officers or private individuals or corporations, or by a storm or freshet or other natural cause. It may consist of a stone or log or other obstacle left on the surface, or of a post standing within the general course and direction of travel over the highway, or of a barrier fixed or stretched across the way, though not touching the soil of the highway. It may perhaps include trees or timber moved by wind or flood. The defect need not have been in exactly the same condition during the time necessary to affect the town or city with notice, if it has continued dangerous during that time. Snow v. Adams, 1 Cush. 447, and cases cited. Merrill v. Wilbraham, 11 Gray, 154. Coggswell v. Lexington, 4 Cush. 307. French v. Brunswick, 21 Maine, 29. Winn v. Lowell, 1 Allen, 177. And a city or town has been held liable for an injury occasioned by the fall of an awning, projecting over the highway, which had been so defective for twenty-four hours previously as to be dangerous to travellers, or likely to be thrown down by such winds, rains oi storms as might ordinarily occur. Drake v. Lowell, 13 Met. 292 Pedrick v. Bailey, 12 Gray, 163. Day v. Milford, 5 Allen, 98. But such awnings were fixed and permanent structures within the bounds of the highway; and this court has more than once expressed the opinion that in such a case the limit of this liability was reached. Hixon v. Lowell, 13 Gray, 64. Keith v Easton, 2 Allen, 553, 554.
But we are not aware of any precedent for holding an illega, *321use of the highway by men, animals, vehicles, engines or any other object, while movable and actually being moved by human will and direction, and neither fixed to, nor resting on, nor remaining in one position within the travelled part of the highway, to be a defect or want of repair for which the city or town is liable. And it is well settled that if the condition of things outside of the highway or the negligent or unlawful act of another person causes or contributes to the injury, the municipal corporation is not liable. Thus a city or town has been held not to be liable for an injury suffered from slipping on steps without the limits of the highway upon the sidewalk and there falling, when both steps and sidewalk were in an unsafe condition ; Rowell v. Lowell, 7 Gray, 100 ; or resulting to a traveller from the upsetting of his sleigh by the combined effect of the town’s neglect to remove snow and of another traveller’s carelessly driving his vehicle against the plaintiff's; Kidder v. Dunstable, 7 Gray, 104; or from his vehicle being struck by a locomotive engine run on a railroad track illegally laid across the highway ; Vinal v. Dorchester, 7 Gray, 421; or by being knocked down by a boy sliding on a sled upon a sidewalk which by such sliding had been made so slippery as to be dangerous. Shepherd v. Chelsea, 4 Allen, 113.
In the case before us, the derrick at one end of the rope and the stone at the other were not within the limits of the highway; the rope lay loosely on the ground, and does not appear to have obstructed the public travel, until the men engaged in removing the stone raised the rope gradually by turning the crank to which it was attached, so as to lift the rope from the ground across the travelled space and thence up out of the way of carnages or travellers; and the rope was in the act of being so raised when it struck the plaintiff’s carriage and injured the emale plaintiff. In the opinion of a majority of the court the .njury thus occasioned cannot be said to have been caused by a defect or want of repair in the highway, and therefore the city is not liable under the statute.
Exceptions sustained.
The plaintiffs thereupon, became nonsuit.