305 Mass. 30 | Mass. | 1940
The jury found for the plaintiff in this action of tort, and the case is here upon a report by the trial judge upon the following stipulation: “If on the pleadings and the evidence, my ruling of law on the defendant’s motion was wrong, judgment is to be entered for the defendant. If on the pleadings and the evidence my rulings of law on the motion were right, the case is to be referred back to the trial court for action on the motion for a new trial.”
A careful examination of the report fails to disclose any evidence whatever of wilful and wanton conduct on the part of the defendant, and although the report is by no means as clear upon the point as it should be, nevertheless we are of the opinion that the questions raised by it are whether the plaintiff is entitled to hold her verdict on the ground that there was evidence of gross negligence, subject to action by the trial court on the plaintiff’s motion for a
On the morning of May 26, 1936, at about quarter past twelve, the automobile, in which the plaintiff, her female companion, the defendant and his male companion were riding, overturned and the plaintiff was injured. The jury could have found that the four occupants had been together since about eight o’clock in the evening. They visited two resorts where liquor was served. At the first place three of them, including the defendant, had “some beer in a small pitcher” at some time between a quarter of nine and 9:30, and at the second place, between eleven and 11:45, three of them, including the defendant, each had a glass of beer, and the plaintiff had a “Ward Eight.” When they left, between 11:30 and 11:45, they all got into the automobile on the front seat; the defendant was driving, with the plaintiff’s female companion sitting next to him and the male friend of the defendant sitting next to her with the plaintiff on his lap. They travelled over what is known as the old Middlesex Turnpike, a dirt road, “rough and bumpy,” but “pretty much of a straight section of highway.” The record discloses nothing as to the existence of any grades upon the road. As they were travelling along the turnpike at a speed of from thirty-five to forty miles an hour, the defendant started to drive with his left hand, putting his right hand on the left knee of the girl sitting next to him; “everybody spoke to him about it,” and he “heeded the objections ... he kept taking his hand off . . . and putting it back on her knee again.” The turnpike runs into the Concord Road which has a hard tarvia surface that is about twenty-four feet in width. Directly opposite where the turnpike joins the Concord Road there is a dirt and cinder road with a gate across it, in front of which there is a gravel and cinder shoulder about eight feet in width. The plaintiff testified “that the intersection had the appearance of the street they were on continuing straight across, but that as one got closer to it one was able to see that there was a gate of some kind on the opposite side of the intersection; that as one drove along the turnpike
It is true that the plaintiff testified that she told the defendant to “put both hands on the wheel but he didn’t do it because he said he could drive just as well with one hand,” but in that connection she also testified “that after that his hand came up on the wheel and he slowed down and turned to the left as he came into the intersection.” Apart from the evidence that the defendant had some beer, the only other testimony bearing upon his condition at the time of the injury came from a part-time police officer who was at the scene and who testified that there was “no evidence of liquor one way or another, no evidence whatsoever of any liquor.” The uncontradicted evidence was that there was no other traffic of any kind on the turnpike.
It has been said that gross negligence “is the omission of even such diligence as habitually inattentive and careless men do not fail to exercise in avoiding danger to their own person or property.” Altman v. Aronson, 231 Mass. 588, 593. Beaton v. Dawson, 303 Mass. 429, 432. In Lynch v. Springfield Safe Deposit & Trust Co. 294 Mass. 170, at page 172, it was said that some of the more common indicia of gross negligence are “deliberate inattention, or . . . voluntary incurring of obvious risk, or . . . impatience of reasonable restraint, or . . . persistence in a palpably negligent course of conduct over an appreciable period of time.” It is true that each case must be decided according to its peculiar features. In the case at bar the features that stand out and require consideration are speed, liquor, four people in the front seat, and driving with one hand.
The speed at which the automobile was being operated would not, in and of itself, amount to gross negligence, Kohutynski v. Kohutynski, 296 Mass. 74; and we do not
It is true that the jury was not required to pass separately upon the various elements that entered into the defendant’s conduct. On the contrary, that conduct was to
In accordance with the stipulation, judgment is to be entered for the defendant.
So ordered.
This motion was by the plaintiff, on the ground that the damages were inadequate. — Reporter.