This is an action brought to recover damages for the instantaneous death of a pedestrian on Hanover Street, caused by collision with a car of the defendant on October 5, 1906. At that time St. 1906, c. 463, Part I, § 63, was in force. In order to recover the plaintiff must prove that her intestate was in the exercise of due care, and that his death was caused by the “gross negligence” of the defendant’s agents or servants. St. 1907, c. 392, which has stricken out the word “ gross ” was not then enacted. The evidence tended to show that at eleven o’clock, on a somewhat foggy night, the plaintiff’s intestate was struck by a car of the defendant running westerly on Hanover Street. The street Was approximately forty feet wide between the curbs, and in it were two tracks of the defendant. It was agreed that the view was substantially unobstructed; that both the plaintiff’s intestate and the motorman could observe the street between them as they approached each other for a distance of eight hundred feet under ordinary conditions; that at the time of the accident there was no diverting travel or other incidents on the street, and that the car had the usual headlight and other lights. There was evidence that the plaintiff’s intestate, starting from the curbing of the sidewalk to the cross walk, looked up and down the street, and that
The plaintiff’s intestate and the defendant’s motorman were on a par with each other, so far as the power of observation, the one by the other, was concerned. In numerous cases, where there has been held to be evidence of gross negligence, the deceased has been in such position that it was impossible for him reasonably to observe the impending danger, as the one in charge of the car well knew. Hartford v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 184 Mass. 365, Mullins v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 201 Mass. 38, Renaud v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 206 Mass. 557, are illustrations of this principle. Where the opportunity for observation is equal, and neither person is under any disability, growing out of youth or age or bodily or mental infirmity or otherwise, and is not in charge of a vehicle nor encumbered by any impediment apparently limiting freedom and ease of action, and where the parties owe to each other correlative duties and obligations the same in kind and degree, it would be difficult to conceive of a case where the facts at the same time would warrant a conclusion that one party to a fatal collision between travellers on a highway was in the exercise of due care and the other grossly negligent. The circumstances of the present case do not justify a finding of gross negligence on the part of the motorman. He and the plaintiff’s intestate were both travellers
The facts of this case, as was said in Devine v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 205 Mass. 416, 418, fall short “of establishing that carelessness on the part of the servants of the defendant, manifestly materially greater than want of common
It becomes unnecessary to decide whether the plaintiff’s intestate was in the exercise of due care. It is familiar law that the ruling of the trial court should stand if sound on any ground, even though different from that stated below.
Exceptions overruled.