288 Mass. 89 | Mass. | 1934
There was evidence that the plaintiff, while walking along the sidewalk on Paris Street, East
There was evidence which, if believed, would warrant the findings that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care, that the material was such in quantity and character as, if left on the sidewalk unguarded in the night time, would constitute a nuisance and that whoever was responsible for its presence there at the time the plaintiff fell was negligent. The question here presented is whether on the evidence the defendant could be found to be such a person.
It was admitted by the plaintiff that the record title to the premises adjacent to the sidewalk was in the defendant’s wife and there was ample evidence to justify the conclusion that she actually was the owner and that under a contract with her a contractor had for some time been engaged in the erection of garages on her property. But-the plaintiff’s husband testified that a few days after his wife’s injury while investigating the accident he went to the defendant, said he wished to hire a garage and asked who owned the garages and that the defendant replied that he did. There was also evidence that after the contractor abandoned the work two days before the accident the defendant on the day before the accident began the work of finishing the garages and thereafter carried that work to
There was evidence that building material was on the sidewalk for some while before and at the time that the contractor abandoned the work, and on the following day when the defendant began the completion of the work, and on the succeeding day when the plaintiff fell. It cannot be determined from the record who was the owner of the material which was on the sidewalk at the time of the plaintiff’s fall or just when or by whom or by whose orders it was there placed. The defendant, who conducted a grocery store in the neighborhood, testified on cross-examination that while the contractor was erecting the garages he went to the premises once or twice a day. He was asked, "... you went there to supervise the job, didn’t you?” and answered, “Sure.” On redirect examination he testified in substance that he had not understood the word "supervise” in the question asked on cross-examination and that he did not mean that he told the men what to do. In answer to questions put by the judge he testified that he was not the boss of the job and did not at any time boss the job. Following this no further questions were put to him by either counsel. There was no testimony that during the period when the contractor was engaged in erecting the garages the defendant gave a single order or direction with reference to the work being done or as to the disposition or location of building material that was used on the job. For all that appears on the record the building material in question might have belonged to the contractor and have been placed on the sidewalk by his direction in the absence of the defendant. It does not appear that the contractor did not have a permit under which he might properly have used the sidewalk for the storage of materials. We do not think that the evidence justifies the finding that the defendant caused the material to be upon the sidewalk and thus became responsible as the creator of the nuisance there existing.
The plaintiff further contends that, because the defendant might have been found to have assumed the completion of the work of erecting the garages on the day before the plaintiff was injured, he was liable for the failure then to remove or guard the material which was on the sidewalk. The evidence did not warrant the finding that he caused it to be there, that he owned it or had acquired the right to control or use it, or that he did use it, or that he had by permit or otherwise the right to occupy or use the sidewalk for the storage of building material. Since the evidence did not warrant the finding that the defendant created the nuisance or that he had control of it or of the place where it existed, he did not become liable to the plaintiff for failure to abate it. Mahar v. Steuer, 170 Mass. 454. Lowell v. Glidden, 159 Mass. 317. Coman v. Alles, 198 Mass. 99.
Exceptions overruled.