288 Mass. 311 | Mass. | 1934
The plaintiffs and one Kelley were seniors at Holy Cross College. The plaintiffs knew that Kelley’s automobile was registered in New York, where he had his domicil, and not in Massachusetts, where to their knowledge he had lived in a college dormitory from September, 1929, until the time of the injury in question on May 6,1930. The plaintiffs were hurt in a collision between the automobile owned and driven by Kelley, in which the plaintiffs were riding as guests, and one operated by the defendant. The trial judge, sitting without a jury, found that the collision was caused by the combined negligence of both operators. The plaintiffs were free from contributory negligence. The only question is, whether the lack of registration in Massachusetts bars them from recovery.
G. L. c. 90, § 1, in effect at the time of the injury, defined a nonresident as “any resident of any state or country who has no regular place of abode or business in the commonwealth for a period of more than thirty days in the year.” The more recent definition established by St. 1931, c. 142, § 1 (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 90, § 1), is not material. Within the controlling definition, Kelley was not a nonresident. His automobile could not lawfully be operated under G. L. c. 90, § 10, by virtue of a New York registration, but registration in Massachusetts was required. Hanson v. Culton, 269 Mass. 471. Avila v. DuPont, 278 Mass. 83. See also Jenkins v. North Shore Dye House, Inc. 277 Mass. 440; Bellenger v. Monahan, 282 Mass. 523. Until the enactment of St. 1915, c. 87 (G. L. c. 90, § 9), a guest riding in an unregistered or
The statute (G. L. c. 90, § 9; G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 90, § 9) provides that the operation of an unregistered automobile, forbidden by the section cited, “shall not constitute a defence to actions of tort for injuries suffered by a person” not the owner or operator, unless it is shown that he “knew or had reasonable cause to know that this section was being violated.” In the present case it appears clearly that the plaintiffs knew all the facts from which flowed the legal conclusion that the operation of the automobile was a violation of the section cited. There is no finding that the plaintiffs knew that such was the legal conclusion, and the general finding for the plaintiffs imports a finding that the defendant had failed to show that the plaintiffs either knew or had reasonable cause to know the legal conclusion. If .the judge, in the face of the plaintiffs’ knowledge of all the material facts, nevertheless could find that they had no reasonable cause to know the legal conclusion, his general finding for the plaintiffs must stand. The question whether-he could so find is properly raised by the defendant’s exception to the refusal of his requested ruling in each case that the plaintiffs could not recover, since the judge required no specification of the grounds of that request. Anderson v. Beacon Oil Co. 281 Mass. 108, 111, and cases cited. Therefore the decisive question is, whether one who knows all the facts can be found to have no reasonable cause to know the unescapable legal conclusion.
In a certain popular sense, one may be said to lack reasonable cause to know the law applicable to known facts. The ordinary man does not know and cannot know legal principles and consequences as to which the most learned jurists are troubled and sometimes disagree. Yet there are serious practical difficulties in submitting to a jury or other tribunal
If the view should be entertained that one who knows all the facts may reasonably be ignorant of the legal result, one of two standards would have to be set up. The standard might be internal, depending upon the intelligence, education, information and memory of the individual, and requiring the jury to try his qualities of mind and decide whether according to his lights he had reasonable cause to know the law. Such an inquiry would depart from most of the analogies in the law. Labrecque v. Donham, 236 Mass. 10. Holmes, Common Law, 108 et seq. The other possible standard is external, requiring the jury to create for themselves a mental image of a man of ordinary legal knowledge, with no more than a reasonable amount of ignorance of law, and then to inquire whether, in view of the knowledge of the facts possessed by the individual whose state of mind is being tried, the standard or ordinary man in the same situation would have reasonable cause to know the law. Not only would the jury be obliged to apply that standard to the facts found, but in clear cases the judge would have to enforce that standard by withdrawing the case from the jury. Difficult as it is to apply the standard of the reasonably prudent man in cases of alleged negligence, it would be still more difficult to set up the standard of the man reasonably well informed upon legal matters, the man of no more than reasonable ignorance of law. This case is not like an action against an attorney for negligence, in which a standard of reasonable professional knowledge has to be set up. Montriou v. Jefferys, 2 C. & P. 113. Holman v. King, 7 Met. 384. Caverly v. McOwen, 123 Mass. 574. For general use in the law, neither of the sug
In Bacon v. Boston Elevated Railway, 256 Mass. 30, the direction of a verdict for the defendant was sustained, where the plaintiff knew that his wife’s automobile, in which he was riding at the time of a collision, was registered in her maiden name. The plaintiff argued that the statute expressly made his excusable ignorance of the law a protection, but the opinion implies that there was nothing for the jury once his knowledge of the facts was shown.
Similar words are found in other branches of the law. We mention the cases upon them not to approve the decisions of particular points, but merely to show the trend of judicial opinion, (a) The right to arrest without a warrant sometimes depends upon the question whether th'e arresting officer had reasonable cause to believe the arrested person guilty of a felony. Commonwealth v. Phelps, 209 Mass. 396, 404. In cases where the classification of the offence is doubtful, it has never been suggested to our knowledge that a reasonable but mistaken belief by the officer that the offence was legally a felony could justify an arrest. • Robinson v. Van Auken, 190 Mass. 161. Zinkfein v. W. T. Grant Co. 236 Mass. 228, 233. Drennan v. People, 10 Mich. 169. (b) In malicious prosecution, apart from the special rules that a conviction, though reversed (Carere v. F. W. Woolworth Co. 259 Mass. 238, 240, 241; Burt v. Smith, 203 U. S. 129, 134; McElroy v. Catholic Press Co. 254 Ill. 290, 298), and advice of counsel upon the law after full disclosure of the facts (Monaghan v. Cox, 155 Mass. 487; Black v. Buckingham, 174 Mass. 102), are ordinarily conclusive that the prosecutor had reasonable cause to believe the plaintiff guilty (Bacon v. Towne, 4 Cush. 217, 238, 239), it has been held that a prosecutor who knows facts which show that the plaintiff committed no crime cannot set up his mistaken opinion of the law as affording him reasonable cause for
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant in each case.