193 Mass. 161 | Mass. | 1906
This case may be divided into two parts, the first relating to the conduct of the plaintiff’s driver in leaving his horse unfastened while he went into a house to deliver groceries, and the second to the conduct of the defendant’s conductor in failing to inform the motorman that there was a horse and wagon astray upon the street, with which there might be danger of collision.
We cannot say, as a matter of law, that the driver was- negligent in momentarily leaving the horse unhitched while he went into the house to deliver groceries. Ordinarily it is negligent to leave a horse and wagon unhitched and unattended upon a public street. But there are some horses which can be so left for a short time, under some conditions, without negligence. The horse in this "case was a large, slow animal, of quiet disposition, which had been used by the plaintiff four or five months in delivering groceries from house to house. It had been the custom to leave her without fastening her or using a weight, and both the plaintiff and his driver testified that they had never known her to go away alone before. The house where she was left on this occasion was one at which she had been accustomed
The defendant contends that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of either of its servants. The accident happened at about seven o’clock in the evening of December 8. The night was rather dark, and the motorman had no reason to expect the approach of a stray horse and wagon on the track. But if we assume, in favor of the defendant, that the jury would not have been warranted in finding the motorman negligent, it was proved beyond dispute that, quickly after the plaintiff’s driver got upon the car, he made the conductor understand that his horse and wagon were astray, and that there-might be danger of encountering them. The conductor testified that “he thought it his duty to notify the motorman, and had started in just as the accident occurred.” The car was only forty feet long, and he testified that he thought he could walk the length of the car in half a minute if he had a clear aisle, and that he had a clear aisle that night. In one part of his testimony he said that it was about a minute and a half after he was told before the horse was struck, and there was other testimony that the car went about a quarter of a mile after the driver got on, before the accident. The evidence tended to show that thé conductor was informed of the stray horse and should have understood that there was danger of a collision as soon as the driver got upon the car.
We are of opinion that it was a question of fact for the jury, whether the conductor exercised due care to inform the motorman of the danger promptly after he was told of it himself.
Exceptions overruled.