273 Mass. 181 | Mass. | 1930
The plaintiff was injured while riding with the defendant as his guest in an automobile operated by the defendant, about ten o’clock on the night of September 4, 1927, as they were going north on Riverdale Street, West Springfield.
The plaintiff testified that he “ sat on the front seat with the defendant .... there were cars on the Riverdale road where the accident happened, plenty of them, some were going to Holyoke and some were going to Springfield .... as they got near the place of the accident the car kind of switched and changed .... from one place to the other, went from side to side. Their car then struck something and the automobile turned over ... he should judge the car was- going about twenty-five or thirty miles an hour.” He also testified that an automobile, in the line of cars going in a southerly direction, “ suddenly left that line and pulled out to the left,” that is, as we understand the record, the operator moving in a southerly direction turned onto the defendant’s side of the road; that the defendant “ turned to his right when this other car came out of the line.”
The plaintiff was asked if he said “ I do not blame Mr. Cuneo for this accident.” He answered “ I never know about this thing, but I always said I believe that Cuneo was right.” The plaintiff further testified that he made
There was evidence that the defendant was drunk; and it appeared when he pulled to the right to avoid the car approaching from the north and moving toward his side of the highway, in order to avoid a collision with this car he turned to the right and struck a sedan car standing on the east side of ’Riverdale Street and facing north.
The burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show that the defendant in operating his vehicle was guilty of gross negligence. The jury could have found that the defendant was drunk. But however unsafe it may be for a drunken person to operate an automobile especially upon a public highway, some act of negligence must be shown in addition to drunkenness to make out a case of gross negligence. From all that appears on this record there was nothing to indicate that the defendant was careless. He was on his right hand side of the way. As we interpret the evidence he was driving carefully. The possibility of danger is always present when a drunken person attempts to operate a motor vehicle, but if he acts as carefully as a sober man of ordinary prudence under the existing circumstances he is not negligent. The fact that the car of the defendant as he got “ near the place of the accident. . . switched and changed ” does not mean that he was careless or negligent. The switching and changing may have been necessary to avoid a collision. A sober and reasonably prudent operator might have acted in the same manner under the conditions then existing. It is not shown that the defendant
We have not considered the question of the plaintiff’s "care as we do not discover in the record sufficient evidence to justify a jury in finding that the defendant was grossly negligent. The defendant’s motion for a directed verdict should have been granted.
Exception's sustained.