The statute establishing the law of the road goes no further than to prescribe the duties and regulate the rights of travellers "in meeting and passing each other with carriages and vehicles, and leaves their rights and liabilities in all other particulars unaltered, and to be regulated and determined by the principles of the common law. Ordinarily, if one traveller in meeting another be found upon the half of the way appointed to him by the statute, travelling with ordinary care and prudence, and he sustain an injury by a collision with the vehicle of another who is upon that part of the way to which he has not the statutory right, the individual who has thus sustained the injury may have redress by action against him who was thus on the part of the way to which the statute did not give him the right. The traveller who thus travels prudently and carefully upon the half of the way assigned to him. will ordinarily pass at the hazard and risk of him who trenches upon his rights in the manner stated. . . . It is legal negligence in any one thus to occupy the half of the way appropriated by law to others having occasion to use it in travelling with teams and carriages, and he is chargeable for any injury flowing exclusively from that cause. . . . If carelessness or negligence be shown on the part of him who may have sustained an injury and who seeks redress, and which has in some measure more or less contributed to the injurious result, in such case it would seem unreasonable to allow a recovery for the damage sustained. It would allow a party to profit by his own negligence or wrong. In order to entitle himself to redress for injuries sustained in passing others on highways, the traveller must himself be faultless; he must not be found invading the rights of others at the time, nor to have contributed to his own injury, in any degree, by reason of his own carelessness or negligence. Carelessness on the part of the injured party, contributing to the injury, would forbid the legal conclusion that would otherwise result, of a right of redress for the injury sustained." Brooks v. Hart,
It is not enough to entitle the plaintiff to damages to show merely that the defendant was travelling in violation of the law of the road at the time of the injury. To maintain his action *376 the plaintiff must establish two propositions, — (1) that the collision was the result of the defendant's negligence, and (2) his own inability to avoid it by the exercise of ordinary care. This he has failed to do. The case finds that there was no preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiff upon the issue whether the collision was caused by the negligence of the plaintiff, or, in other words, whether the plaintiff could have avoided the collision by the exercise of ordinary care. It does not appear, therefore, that the collision was not due to the plaintiff's negligence, notwithstanding the defendant was on the wrong side of the road.
If the defendant was guilty of legal negligence in not turning to the right of the centre of the highway, which we do not decide, it was, nevertheless, the duty of the plaintiff to exercise ordinary care to avoid a collision. "To warrant a recovery where both parties are present at the time of the injury, as well as in other cases, ability on the part of the defendant must concur with nonability on the part of the plaintiff to prevent it by ordinary care. Their duty to exercise this degree of care is equal and reciprocal; neither is exonerated from his obligation by the present or previous misconduct of the other. The law no more holds one responsible for an unavoidable, or justifies an avoidable, injury to the person of one who carelessly exposes himself to danger, than to his property, similarly situated in his absence. He who cannot prevent an injury negligently inflicted upon his person or property by an intelligent agent, `present and acting at the time' (State v. Manchester Lawrence Railroad,
No negligence on the part of the defendant is shown other than the legal negligence of not seasonably turning to the right of the centre of the highway. Whether the defendant's legal negligence in violating the law of the road rendered him liable to the plaintiff in damages depends upon the determination of the question whether the injury could or could not have been avoided by the exercise of ordinary care by the plaintiff, whether it was or was not the legal cause of the injury. The fact that the defendant was violating the law of the road does not as matter of law warrant a recovery by the plaintiff. Damon v. Scituate,
The statute required the defendant seasonably to turn to the right of the centre of the travelled part of the road, so as to enable the plaintiff "to pass with his vehicle without interference." G. L., c. 75, s. 11. As the street at the place of the collision was of ample width to allow the plaintiff to pass the defendant's team without interference, it is apparent that the defendant's failure to turn to the right of the centre of the highway was not the legal cause of the collision.
Judgment for the defendant.
SMITH, J., did not sit: the others concurred.