320 Mass. 475 | Mass. | 1946
The plaintiff prosecutes this action as administrator of the estate of Francis T. Campbell to recover for the death of his intestate alleged to have been caused by negligence of the defendant. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 229, § 5, as amended by St. 1937, c. 406, § 3. See now St. 1946, c. 614, § 1, to take effect January 1, 1947. After a verdict for the plaintiff the judge entered a verdict for the defendant upon leave reserved. Both parties are here on exceptions.
The plaintiff’s intestate was instantly killed by the collision of an automobile driven by him and an automobile driven by the defendant on a macadam paved highway in Oxford at about 5:45 a.m. on August 1, 1941. The pavement was from thirty-two to thirty-three feet in width, and there was on each side a shoulder varying from six to nine feet in width. The road was straight for a distance of eight or nine hundred feet south of the point of collision. The defendant was travelling north close to his right hand side of the pavement. Beyond the facts just stated there was little agreement. The witnesses gave widely divergent narratives as to what occurred.
From the evidence more favorable to the plaintiff the jury could have found that the deceased had been travelling south; that he crossed to the east side of the road and entered the premises of a gasoline station; that finding no one in attendance, he started out again, “rolling out slowly” at from five to ten miles an hour and looking toward the road; and that his course was in a general southerly direction at an acute angle to the road as he approached it. A woman companion in the automobile with him testified that he was looking toward the south, the direction from which the defendant was approaching; that it was then possible to see in that direction four or five times the length of the court room; and that at that time “there was nothing
There was evidence of admissions by the defendant that he did not see the automobile of the deceased at any time previous to the collision. There was also evidence that he saw it at least one thousand feet away, and that it did not come out of the gasoline station at all, but came to its left across the highway and hit the defendant’s automobile.
1. There was evidence of causal negligence on the part of the defendant. The jury could have found that the deceased was coining out from the gasoline station; that the collision occurred at the extreme edge of a broad road; that the defendant was proceeding at a high rate of speed on a wet, misty morning; that he did not see the automobile of the deceased until the collision occurred; and that if he had been driving more slowly or more alertly he would have seen the front end of it as it slowly approached the macadam in time to avoid it by slowing down or veering slightly to his left, where he had at his disposal almost the whole of the road. See Carbonneau v. Cavanaugh, 290 Mass. 139, 141; Perricotti v. Andelman, 298 Mass. 461; Avery v. R. E. Guerin Trucking Co. Inc. 304 Mass. 500, 505; Marturano v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 306 Mass. 231, 234; Nash v. Heald, 306 Mass. 518; Baczek v. Damian, 307 Mass. 167; Morton v. Dobson, 307 Mass. 394, 398; Gaines v. Ratnowsky, 311 Mass. 254. Compare Edwards v. Warwick, 317 Mass. 573.
.2. The judge could not properly enter the verdict for the defendant on the ground of contributory negligence of the deceased. By G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 85, the person killed ■ was "presumed to have been in the exercise of due care, and contributory negligence on his part . . . [was] an affirmative defence to be . . . proved by the defendant.” In actions for death there is commonly no witness by whose testimony as to the circumstances of the accident the administrator is bound. See Fulton v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co. of Boston, 303 Mass. 258, 263-264; Lydon v. Boston Elevated Railway, 309 Mass. 205, 206-207. In such cases, therefore, the effect of the statute is usually to prevent the direction of a verdict for the defendant on the ground of contributory negligence of the deceased, if it is reasonably possible that the death could have been caused by negligence of the defendant, as alleged, without contributory negligence of the deceased. Mercier v. Union Street Railway, 230 Mass. 397, 403-404. Conroy v. Maxwell, 248 Mass. 92, 96.
3. We cannot accept the defendant’s contention that a judgment in his favor against the plaintiff as administrator rendered by the District Court of the United States for
We do not pause to discuss the general question of the power of Federal courts by rules for the regulation of their own practice to preclude a party sued in a Federal court from resorting to a State court to establish his own claim. See Red Top Trucking Corp. v. Seaboard Freight Lines, Inc. 35 Fed. Sup. 740. Compare Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Hathaway Baking Co. 306 Mass. 428, 433-435. In the present case at least there is no res judicata because the parties in the Federal court were not the same as the parties in the present action. In the Federal court the administrator was necessarily sued in his capacity as the representative of the estate of the deceased for the benefit of creditors and distributees. But it is settled that in bringing an action like the present one, based upon the death statute of this Commonwealth, for the benefit of the persons designated in the statute, the administrator acts in a different capacity and in the law of res judicata is not the same person as he is when he represents the estate in general. McCarthy v. William H. Wood Lumber Co. 219 Mass. 566. Eaton v. Walker, 244 Mass. 23, 31. Beauvais v. Springfield Institution for Savings, 303 Mass. 136, 147. Chambers v. Cameron, 29 Fed. Sup. 742, 744. The decision in Biggio v. Magee, 272 Mass. 185, does not apply. • We cannot give to the Federal rule the
4. The plaintiff called as a witness a brother of the deceased who was a police officer of Worcester, and who testified to a conversation with the deceased the day before the accident in which the deceased said he was going to Rye, New York, to get married, leaving early the following day. On cross-examination the defendant’s counsel offered to show that the witness and two other police officers of Worcester who had testified for the plaintiff at the trial of this case were not called as witnesses at the trial in the Federal court, and stated that he wanted to ask the witness on the stand whether or not he had told his father, who was the administrator and the plaintiff in this case, “about such conversation.” The evidence was excluded. The extent to which a party may go in impeaching the testimony of witnesses called by his opponent on matters not vital to the case, as well as the limits of cross-examination in general, are within the control of the trial judge. Commonwealth v. Schaffner, 146 Mass. 512, 515. Commonwealth v. McDermott, 255 Mass. 575, 580. Kenyon v. Hathaway, 274 Mass. 47, 49. Guiffre v. Carapezza, 298 Mass. 458, 460. Commonwealth v. Beal, 314 Mass. 210, 229. Compare Gossman v. Rosenberg, 237 Mass. 122. The fact that the two other officers had not testified in the Federal court had already appeared from their own testimony, and the conversation between the witness then on the stand and the deceased as to the intention of the deceased to marry the next day was not sufficiently vital to the case to render the exclusion of cross-examination about it error.
5. There was no error in allowing the jury to take to the jury room toy automobiles that had been used “for.demonstration purposes” at the trial.
The defendant’s exceptions are overruled, The plaintiff’s exceptions are sustained. The verdict entered by the judge on leave reserved is set aside. The verdict returned by the jury is to stand, and judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff on that verdict.'
So ordered.