The defendant's argument upon its motions for nonsuits seems to be chiefly based upon the contention that the weight of the evidence was against the plaintiffs. However this may have been, an examination of the record discloses sufficient testimony to warrant a finding that the automobile went over an unrailed embankment, thereby causing the injuries complained of. The argument that the plaintiff who was driving the car was guilty of contributory negligence, is not supported by conclusive proof that ordinary men would not have acted as he did in the premises. Therefore it cannot avail the defendant here. Blood v. New Boston, 77 N.H. 464.
The fact that the stone in the road may have been a contributing cause for the accident does not relieve the defendant from liability, if the unrailed embankment was also a cause. Prichard v. Boscawen, ante, 131.
The motions to set aside the verdicts as against the law and the evidence, because it appeared from facts not in evidence at the trial that portions of the Hill road were state aided, were properly denied. On their face these motions make no cause for such relief. But, as suggested by defendant's counsel, the facts alleged may hereafter be made the ground of motions for new trials. The question sought to be raised has been argued without objection, and as its decision appears to be essential to a final disposition of the cases it has been considered.
The highway where the accident happened had not been made a state aided road. Before it could be so considered some action must have been taken by some one in authority indicating an intention to so treat it in the future. Nothing of the kind had been done. The southerly end of the road had been reconstructed by the city under state supervision and with state aid. Another part had been staked out by the city authorities, with a view to similar reconstruction, *Page 242 and at another point a culvert had been rebuilt under state supervision and with state aid. But none of these things had been done at the place of the accident. At that point it was merely a municipal highway, other parts of which had become state sided road.
It is urged that the decision in Grace v. Belmont, ante, 112, is authority for the proposition that the exemption from liability here relied upon applies to the whole of a road, any part of which is state sided. But what is there said refers to a road the whole of which was in terms made state aided and state supervised by the statute. Although no state money had been expended upon the part where the accident happened, it was subject to state control. It was because of this control that the exemption of the town from liability was held to apply.
The distinction between the two cases is that between roads which have been designated as state aided and put under state control by the legislature, and those which can become state aided only upon certain things being done. How far, in the latter case, the proceedings must have progressed in order that the exemption should apply, is a question not here presented. If it were assumed, as has been argued, that any step which irrevocably committed the city to the undertaking would be sufficient, the fact remains that no such step had been taken as to this piece of road. And the statute seems to plainly provide that the road must be designated by the concurrent action of the state and municipal authorities. Laws 1905, c. 35, s. 6. It further provides that highways "improved by the expenditure of said joint fund shall thereafter," be subject to state supervision. Laws 1905, c. 35, s. 8; Laws 1911, c. 192, s. 1; Laws 1913, c. 119. By no process of reasoning can this be construed to mean that they are theretofore so subject. As matters stood at the date in question, the state had no power to supervise the repairs at this point, nor to make them in the event of a refusal by the city. The highway was wholly within the city's control, and the usual liability for its condition was imposed upon the municipality.
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred. *Page 243