265 Mass. 589 | Mass. | 1929
The plaintiff testified that, accompanied by her husband, on Christmas day, 1924, at about half past eleven in the evening, she went to the corner of Harvard Street and Commonwealth Avenue, in Boston, to take a Dudley Street car; that when the car came to a stop and the motorman opened the front door, she stepped upon the platform and before she had reached a seat the car started with a sudden jerk, causing her to fall and break her leg. She further testified that when she fell she was inside the door on the platform where the motorman was; that the door did not push her forward when it was closed or cause her to fall; that she did not know that the car was going to start; that the gong was not sounded. In describing the starting of the car she testified that it was “a very bad jerk; that she had never seen anything like it before”; that she had no opportunity to take hold of anything before she fell. Although the plaintiff had not stepped up into the car where the seats for passengers are located, she was upon the platform where the motorman stood and the doors had been closed.
It is a matter of common knowledge that electric cars cannot be started without occasional jerks and jolts. There is no evidence that this car started with more violence than is usual. It has often been held that the starting of an electric car in the manner described is not evidence of negligence on the part of the motorman. Martin v. Boston Elevated Railway, 216 Mass. 361. Anderson v. Boston Elevated Railway, 220 Mass. 28, 32, and cases cited. O’Neill v. Boston Elevated Railway, 248 Mass. 362. Gollis v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 254 Mass. 157.
It is settled in this Commonwealth that under ordinary circumstances it is not negligence for a conductor to give the starting signal after the passenger is fully and fairly on the car, and that ordinarily it is not necessary for the safety of a passenger in normal physical condition that the car should be delayed until he is seated. Flanagan v. Boston Elevated Railway, 216 Mass. 337. Martin v. Boston Elevated Railway, supra.
As there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the-defendant, the judge rightly directed a verdict in its favor. The cases cited by the plaintiff are easily distinguishable in their facts from the case at bar.
Exceptions overruled.