213 Mass. 510 | Mass. | 1913
The judge at the trial acted rightly in refusing the defendant’s first and third requests and in submitting the case to the jury.
There was evidence that the accident was due to negligence of the defendant’s driver Kellough. Indeed this hardly has been contested.
It could be found also that the plaintiff’s intestate was in the exercise of as high a degree of care as properly could be expected from one of his age. According to the testimony of Coughlin the intestate was walking along the sidewalk until his progress was stopped by the girder. Then Kellough suddenly started the horses to pull the girder; the roller was drawn across the sidewalk, caught the intestate’s foot, knocked him down and rolled upon .his body. He had no warning of the starting of the horses or of the danger of his foot being caught. No caution was given to him by Kellough or any one else. He was not bound to anticipate that the .girder would be started or that there would be a protruding roller likely to hit him or to catch his foot. It could be found that he had not seen the other girders drawn away, and that there was absolutely nothing to indicate the presence of any impending danger. Under such circumstances it would have been wrong to rule that his conduct was negligent.
The giving of the fourth request with the qualification added to it by the judge certainly was sufficiently favorable to the defendant. One of the reasons why a child is not held to the same degree of care as if he were an adult is lack of appreciation of the risks that he may be running.
The exception to what the judge said to the jury, about the lateness of the hour and as to whether Kellough was in a hurry to feed his horses and. get home, cannot be. sustained. It was proper to call the attention of the jury to the subject. The case does not resemble Plummer v. Boston Elevated Railway, 198 Mass. 499, 516. It does not need direct evidence to enable a jury to say that this may be so at a time between half-past six and seven o’clock in the evening, and the fact might have a bearing upon Kellough’s conduct and the inferences to be drawn from it.
None of the other exceptions requires discussion.
Exceptions overruled.