255 Mass. 539 | Mass. | 1926
The plaintiff was walking along the sidewalk of Chandler Street in Lawrence, in front of the premises of the defendants, at nine o’clock in the dusk of an August evening, when shé caught her foot in a tangled bunch of wire and was thrown to the ground. She brought suit for damages, and alleged that the defendants conduct a junk business at the place of the accident, and in person or by their agents or servants ' ‘ piled junk, tangled wire or hoops upon the sidewalk in front of said premises and improperly and negligently allowed the same to remain there” and that while she was walking on the sidewalk in the exercise of due care “she stumbled over, fell and was entangled in said junk, tangled wire or hoops which the defendants negligently placed or allowed to be there.”
The defendants saved exceptions to the admission of certain testimony, and to the refusal of the judge to order a verdict in their favor. The case is before us upon a report with a stipulation that, if there was any evidence to be submitted to the jury on the issues of due care and negligence, the verdict for the plaintiff is to stand unless the rulings on evidence were improper, in which case there is to be a new trial; that if the verdict should have been directed for the defendants because, as matter of law, the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care, or because there was no evidence upon which the jury could properly find the defendants negligent, a verdict is to be entered for the defendants.
It could not have been ruled as matter of law that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care. She testified that she lived in the next building to the junk yard and knew that junk was often on the sidewalk; that she did not see the piece of wire which tripped her, though she could have seen it if she had looked at it; and that she was watching carefully,
There was evidence that teams in the presence of one or other of the defendants habitually unloaded junk over the sidewalk through a place where the fence — which shut in the junk yard — was cut down for the purpose; that the fence leaned at the top six inches or more over the sidewalk; that piles of junk rested against and overtopped the fence; that dangling masses of wire hung from its top; that, at the time of the accident, “the sidewalk was scattered with junk”; that the next day when the plaintiff called the attention of one of the defendants to what had happened “from your careless leaving junk on the sidewalk, after you close your place of business,” he laughed at her, and, later, said “I can’t help my men if they leave junk on the sidewalk.”
No single item in the evidence proved the time at which the wire arrived on the spot, or where it came from, or who put it there, or what, if anything, the defendants or any of their servants or agents knew about it; but as a whole the testimony pictured a situation from which the jury might infer that the defendants knew that wire was likely to drop from their overhanging piles, or to be thrown carelessly upon the sidewalk by unloading teamsters in the course of that very afternoon, and that they failed to see that it was cleared away or rendered safe. This could be found to be negligent.
It is true that the plaintiff must show by evidence a greater likelihood that her injury came from an act of negligence for which the defendants are responsible than from a cause for which they are not liable, Bigwood v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 209 Mass. 345, 348; but here the evidence goes beyond mere surmise and conjecture.
Sanborn v. McKeagney, 229 Mass. 300, and Tiffany v. F. Vorenberg Co. 238 Mass. 183, cited by the defendants, do not establish that the defendants here had no duty to keep the sidewalk clear. In those cases the dangerous objects were put on the sidewalks by others than the defendants.
Nor do Sweatland v. Springfield Public Market, Inc. 247 Mass. 268, Goddard v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 179 Mass. 52, Downing v. Jordan Marsh Co. 234 Mass. 159, or Towne v. Waltham Watch Co. 247 Mass. 390, the only other authorities cited by the defendants, control. In none of them did the evidence show such cause on the part of the defendants to know of a dangerous condition or such strong probability of fault.
There is nothing in the contention that the evidence objected to was admitted wrongly. The condition of the fence and of the sidewalk was material to an understanding of the place and the circumstances surrounding the accident. Daniels v. Lowell, 139 Mass. 56. Neal v. Boston, 160 Mass. 518.
The rulings of the judge were correct; and,.in accord with the stipulation, the order must be
Verdict to stand.