— This action is brought under section 904 of the Revision of 1860, which provides: If any able-bodied mom, when duly summoned to perform labor on the highway, fails, etc., he is liable to a fine of ten dollars, to be recovered by suit before any justice of the peace in the name of the district and for the use of the road fund of said district, etc. The statute authorizes the road supervisor to call out any or all the “ able-bodied men ” of his district for not more than two days at a time to work on the highway when the same becomes unsafe or impassable. And if any such able-bodied man, after being 'duly summoned, fails to obey such summons, etc., he is, by section 904, liable to the penalty of ten dollars. Under these provisions of the statute only aMe-bodied men can be sum*77moned. by the supervisor, and only such are liable to be fined for disobedience. No others are included. One who is not an able-bodied man is without the statute. The appellee was not an able-bodied man. He did not therefore come within the purview of the law. He was not one of those whom the road supervisor had authority to summon, nor is he liable to pay the fine imposed. for refusal.
The fine can only be imposed upon able-bodied men who disobey when duly summoned.
The condition of appellee is not in the nature of a privilege that he must assert or waive. He is entirely outside the operation of the statute, and his failure to make his condition known to the supervisor did not operate to bring him within its provisions; neither did the fact that he sent a substitute. One who is not by law an able-bodied man may send another person to work on the highway without becoming liable to the penalty provided in the statute. Were it otherwise a woman might subject herself to the penalty, should she send a person to work the highway, in the event such person should be rejected by the road supervisor.
The judgment is
Affirmed.