193 Mass. 63 | Mass. | 1906
Unless the jury should have been instructed that as matter of law either the infant plaintiff was careless, or that there was no evidence of the defendant’s negligence, the verdicts in favor of his father and of himself must stand. In .lawfully using the public ways concurrently with the defendant, the infant plaintiff as a traveller was required to exercise only such degree of care as under like conditions would have been exercised by the ordinarily prudent child of his years. McDer
The evidence as to the position of the plaintiff immediately before he was injured was conflicting. According to the testimony introduced by the defendant he ran directly back of the car which was going south, and at once came into contact about midway of its length with the car coming from the south and going north. But according to the evidence of the plaintiff, who was corroborated by other witnesses, he did not cross until after the car going south had passed, and when he first saw the car that struck him he had reached the middle of the easterly track, about ten feet in front of the car, which was moving at a speed not exceeding four miles an hour. It was undisputed that notwithstanding a rule of the company requiring the gong to be rung at all street crossings, and at all points where vehicles or foot passengers were crossing or ordinarily would be likely to cross the tracks, this signal was not given by the motorman, and that if the emergency brake had been applied the car could have been stopped within a distance of from three to five feet. The jury were not bound to adopt the defendant’s theory of the accident, or to accept the evidence of its witnesses. If they believed the. plaintiff’s statement as being a true version of his conduct, and of the management of the car by the defendant’s servant, they could find that the motorman not only neglected to give the required warning, but failed to observe the plaintiff, who was in front of the car near the middle of the track, and that if he had used reasonable diligence he would have seen him, and observing his peril at once should have, applied the emergency brake, and that if this precaution had been taken or the gong rung the accident would have been avoided. Stevens v. Boston Elevated Railway, 184 Mass. 476, 479. These inferences were questions of fact solely for their consideration. Sweetland v. Lynn & Boston Railroad, 177 Mass. 574. Driscoll v. West End Street Railway, 159 Mass. 142, 147. Aiken
Exceptions overruled.