351 Mass. 360 | Mass. | 1966
In this action for personal injuries, tried without a jury, there was conflicting evidence whether
The judge granted the defendant’s request 1, that “On all the evidence the plaintiff has not sustained the burden of proof of showing a defect on the stairs at the point where she fell and there must be a finding for the Defendant.” There is nothing in the plaintiff’s exception to the granting of this request. Consistent with his action on this request, the judge ruled, on the plaintiff’s request 5, that there was evidence that the defendant was negligent and, on the plaintiff’s request 1, that there was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding for the plaintiff, but he noted that such a finding was “not required on facts found. ’ ’
The judge, however, acted inconsistently on at least one other request. He denied the plaintiff’s request 4: “ There is evidence that the alleged defect as described by the plaintiff as having caused her fall had been in existence for an unreasonable length of time.” He granted the defendant’s request 2: “The so-called ‘hole’ described by the plaintiff does not constitute a legal defect.”
The duty of the judge to show beyond doubt that he is resolving the case on factual issues, if such is his intention, has been reiterated. See, for example, Liberatore v. Framingham, 315 Mass. 538, 542. Failure in specification and clarity unnecessarily imposes a burden on this court, and extends the date when final judgment may be entered.
We think, however, that the defendant’s request 2, though not in terms hypothetical, can reasonably be construed only as a ruling that such a hole as described could not be found to be an actionable defect. It was error to give this request.
The basis for the trial judge’s finding for the defendant does not reasonably appear from his rulings. Hoffman v. Chelsea, 315 Mass. 54, 57. Compare Brodeur v. Seymour, 315 Mass. 527, 530, where the judge had made a “painstaking analysis of the facts” with “special numbered findings on points deemed important.” The judge did nothing of that kind in this case. We cannot be sure that the basis for granting the defendant’s request 1 (“the plaintiff has not sustained the burden of proof of showing a defect on the stairs”) did not lie in the granting of the defendant’s request 2, notwithstanding the well understood difference between a “defect” and a “legal defect.”- Compare Hoffman v. Chelsea, 315 Mass. 54, 58.
Exceptions sustained.
This case was entered on February 6, 1956.