285 Mass. 491 | Mass. | 1934
This is an action of tort by which the plaintiff seeks to recover damages at common law for an injury received by her when she slipped upon some ice and fell on the defendant’s premises near its viaduct at Lynn, Massachusetts. Due and sufficient notice of time, place and cause of injury was given by the plaintiff to the defendant. The plaintiff’s declaration contains one count, alleging that the plaintiff received injuries because of the slippery condition of a sidewalk on the defendant’s premises caused by an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice, negligently allowed to remain on the sidewalk, which had been collected and discharged there from the viaduct or elevated structure of the defendant. The defendant’s amended answer is a general denial; and it sets up contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff and denies that the passageway referred to in the declaration was a public passageway.
The material and uncontested evidence discloses that in 1912, 1913 and 1914, as the result of proceedings for the abolition of grade crossings at Lynn, the defendant built a viaduct to carry its tracks through that city. "The
On February 5, 1929, at about 5 p.m. the plaintiff, after office hours, went shopping. Taking the nearer route she entered the passageway under the viaduct at the Mt. Vernon Street end and went through it to a fruit and vege
At the close of the evidence after both parties had rested, the defendant duly presented a written motion for a directed verdict on the one count in the plaintiff’s declaration. This motion the judge allowed, and directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. To this allowance the plaintiff duly excepted.
The judge was right in directing a verdict for the defendant. There was no evidence to support a contention that the plaintiff was a passenger or went upon the premises of the defendant to become such, or that she was upon the premises of the defendant for any purpose connected with the defendant’s business. The plaintiff’s right, if any she has against the defendant, arises from the fact that the defendant had leased some stores, some in the above mentioned passageway and some on the northerly sidewalk which extended from the Exchange Street end of the viaduct to the defendant’s railroad depot. There is no evidence
So ordered.
St. 1912, c. 492.