after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
1. It is urged that the court erred in admitting in evidence the records of the county court in the matter of the location and relocation of the road, for the reason that they show on their face that the court was without jurisdiction over the subject-matter or the parties to be affected by the establishment of the road: We had occasion, in thé recent case of Bayard v. Standard Oil Co. 38 Or. 438 (63 Pac. 614), to consider the question of the competency as evidence of irregular and ineffectual proceedings of a county court in the matter of the establishment of a county road in an action brought by a traveler to recover damages for an injury alleged to have been received by him, caused by an encroachment by the defendant on the public highway. It was held, in effect, that such proceedings are evidence of color of title, and that a subsequent user by the public of the road attempted to be located, for the statutory period, if begun and continued with reference to the proceedings of the county court, is proof of a legal highway, the full width designated in such proceedings. It is undisputed that the road, as attempted to be located, was afterwards opened, and, prior to the accident, had been in continuous use by the public as a highway for more than ten years. The proceedings of the court were therefore competent and admissible as testimony, and in connection with the public user, sufficient proof of the establishment of the road sixty feet in width.
2. It is also admitted, or undisputed, that the cut made in the construction of the defendant company’s railroad is within such sixty-foot limit, and was made without permission of the county authorities. It is therefore a nuisance, and a traveler who, while himself using *335ordinary care, is injured thereby, has a cause of action against the person or company responsible therefor : 15 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 ed.), 433 ; Angell & Durfee, Highw. (2 ed.) § 290; Congreve v. Smith, 18 N. Y. 79 ; Beck v. Carter, 68 N. Y. 283.
3. The answer does not deny that the cut was made by the defendant company, but after the motion for a nonsuit had been overruled, the defendant applied to the court below for permission to amend it, so as to make such denial, and in support thereof stated that, if the amendment was allowed, it proposed to show that it was made by a contractor, and not by the company. The application for leave to amend was denied, and this ruling is assigned as error. If it be conceded that a railroad company is not liable for an injury caused by an excavation in a public highway made by a contractor in the construction of its road (but see McAllister v. City of Albany, 18 Or. 426, 23 Pac. 845), there was no reversible error in denying the application. The motion was addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and, as there was no abuse thereof, its action will not be disturbed. We must assume, therefore, under the pleadings and the record, that the cut was made by the defendant company, or that it is responsible therefor the same as if it had been so made.
4. This bi’ings us to the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence. As has often been said, contributory negligence is usually a question for the jury. The elements which enter into its consideration are generally of such a nature as to make it an issue of fact. Indeed, even when the facts are not disputed, but different inferences may be drawn from them, the question is still for the jury. In considering this phase of the case, it is *336important to bear in mind that the plaintiff was traveling along a public highway, where he had a right to.be, and that the defendant, for its own benefit, and without the consent of the county authorities, had changed the face of the road, greatly increasing the danger to travelers. The plaintiff had not been over the road since the construction of the railway, was not familiar with its condition, nor did he know before he started in the morning that the brake on his wagon would not work satisfactorily, or that his horses would not hold a wagon on a grade. He asked for a gentle team and a wagon suitable for the journey he desired to make, and supposed he had them. Indeed, the evidence tends to show that he did have. The court can not rule, therefore, as a matter of law, that he was guilty of such contributory negligence as would prevent a recovery. The general doctrine applicable to cases of this character is that one is not precluded from a recovery, even against a municipality, for an injury caused by a defective highway on account of defects in his vehicle or harness or vice in the horse, unless these were actually or constructively known to him (15 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law [2 ed.], 474; Gardner v. Wasco County, 37 Or. 392, 400, 61 Pac. 834), and there is ho proof that the plaintiff had any such knowledge.
5. Nor is it any defense that he did not exercise that cool and deliberate judgment in the sudden emergency confronting him that subsequent investigation suggests would have been the most prudent course. Where one suddenly finds himself in a place of danger through another’s want of care, he can not be held guilty of contributory negligence merely because he does not act in the best way, or exercise that presence of mind required of a careful and prudent man under ordinary circum*337stances : Beach, Contrib. Neg. § 40; Malloy v. Walker Township, 77 Mich. 448 (43 N. W. 1012, 6 L. R. A. 695).
6. Whether the plaintiff exercised proper care, caution, and judgment at the time of the accident, under all the circumstances, and whether he was a skilled or unskilled driver, were all questions of fact, and there was no error in the trial court submitting them to the jury.
Several assignments of error are based upon the giving and refusing of instructions, but, upon the whole, we think the case was fairly and properly submitted to the jury, and that no reversible error- can be predicated upon the instructions. The judgment will therefore be affirmed. Affirmed.