299 Mass. 345 | Mass. | 1938
These two actions of tort were tried together in a district court. The first action was brought by a minor by his next friend to recover compensation for personal injuries sustained by him as a result of the alleged negligent operation of a motor vehicle by the defendant. The sec-
First. In the action brought by the minor plaintiff the Appellate Division based its order for the entry of judgment for the defendant on the ground of error by the trial court in denying the defendant’s request that “The plaintiff has not sustained the burden of proving by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was negligent.” The Appellate Division was right. The evidence did not warrant a finding that the defendant was negligent and, consequently, did not warrant a finding for the plaintiff.
The evidence tended to show these facts: The accident occurred in the afternoon of September 4, 1934, on Rock-land Street, a public highway in the city of Quincy, when the defendant was operating a motor vehicle travelling in a southerly direction. At the right of the travelled part of the' highway, which was twenty feet wide, was a grass plot, and beyond the grass plot a concrete sidewalk which “was very rough and had large stones on it.” The plaintiff, a boy then eleven years old, was a member of a boys’ club of which the defendant was captain. The boys were in the habit of saluting him when they saw him. When the plaintiff was walking — or running — on the sidewalk he heard an automobile coming along “in the center of the road” behind him which he recognized as the defendant’s automobile. This automobile was travelling at a speed of about ten to twelve — or fifteen — miles an hour. The plaintiff looked back, saluted the defendant when he was twenty feet- — or “about a car length” — away, “stumbled on a rock on the sidewalk and turned and stumbled from the sidewalk into the road.” The right rear wheel of the defendant’s automobile ran over the plaintiff’s right foot. The defendant turned the automobile toward the “center of the road” and “went about a car length” and stopped. After stopping, the defendant opened the automobile door and asked the plaintiff, who was “hopping around” on his
According to the testimony of the defendant he saw the plaintiff when one hundred seventy-five to two hundred feet away, but not later. But according to a statement signed by the plaintiff which was introduced in evidence the defendant returned the plaintiff’s salute. According to this statement, also, the defendant’s automobile when the plaintiff stumbled “was moving along the rough road on the right side of the highway,” and the plaintiff thought by reason of the defendant’s actions, “saluting me and driving so slowly, that he was going to stop for me because his car seemed to pull toward the right side of the road as he approached me.” While in this statement the plaintiff said that the “right rear wheel” of the defendant’s automobile ran over his foot, in answer to interrogatories the plaintiff said: “I don’t know what part of the car hit me.”
There is no basis in the evidence for a finding that the defendant was negligent in the operation of the automobile unless on the ground that, in the exercise of reasonable care, he should have foreseen that the plaintiff would come into the path of the automobile and thereby be exposed to the risk of being struck by it. There was no evidence that the plaintiff was not on the sidewalk when the defendant’s automobile was approaching, or that the automobile ran upon the sidewalk, though it could have been found that the automobile was travelling so near the sidewalk that the plaintiff could fall from the sidewalk into its path. Doubtless the defendant was bound to exercise care with respect to persons on the sidewalk. See Murray v. Liebmahn, 231 Mass. 7; Meech v. Sewall, 232 Mass. 460. But there was no evidence that if the plaintiff had remained on the sidewalk he would have been struck by the automobile, or that the defendant could have done anything after the plaintiff fell into the “road” to prevent the automobile from striking him. And it could not have been found that there was any reason for the defendant to expect that the plaintiff would
Second. In the action brought by the father of the minor plaintiff the evidence was the same, in substance, as in the other action. It consisted principally of testimony of the minor plaintiff and of the defendant, answers to interrogatories by the minor plaintiff and a written statement signed by him. The report of the trial judge states that "the defendant made the following requests for rulings, which were allowed by the Court, 1. The plaintiff in this action cannot recover unless his son, Ernest Baker, Jr., recovers in his suit for injuries against the same defendant. 2. The plaintiff in this action cannot recover unless the Court finds that Ernest Baker, Jr. was in the exercise of due care and that the defendant was negligent at the time of the alleged accident. The Court found for the plaintiff. The defendant claiming to be aggrieved by these rulings and finding, I hereby report the same to the Appellate Division for determination.”
The defendant was not aggrieved by the rulings of law made at his request, and the report of the "finding” presented no question of law for review by the Appellate Division. Doubtless this general finding for the plaintiff implied a ruling of law that such finding was warranted by the evidence. But in an ordinary trial of fact on evidence, as here, if the defendant wished to raise the question of law whether the finding was so warranted, and to preserve his right to review thereof, it was essential that he present a request for a ruling and ask for a report to that end. Reid v. Doherty, 273 Mass. 388, 389. Segal v. Allied Mutuals Liability Ins.
It follows that in the case brought by the minor plaintiff the order of the Appellate Division must be affirmed, but that in the case brought by the father of the minor plaintiff the order of the Appellate Division must be reversed and an order entered dismissing the report.
So ordered.