228 Mass. 357 | Mass. | 1917
The plaintiff in describing her conduct and the cause of her injuries said, “I came from Walnut Street going to work and turned to the right to the other corner of the cross walk and started to cross over Main Street. I looked both ways and I saw a car coming north from City Hall and that was about at Barnard’s. The streets were broken up and I saw no car going south from Lincoln Square. I picked my way along. The first thing I saw, the car was on to me when I saw it and I tried to step back and the street was in such a condition that I tripped. I do not know whether I went forward or backward. The pavement and things were behind my heels. . . . Before starting to cross Main Street, I looked down and up toward the north. I saw a car coming from City Hall going north but I did not see any car coming from Lincoln Square going south. Then I started to cross and I gave the other car, going north, a chance to get by the track that I was to cross and I got almost to the car track when I saw the other car, the one going south. It was almost on me and'I stepped back and something tripped me—stones or something tripped me. ... I noticed that the street was broken up. There "was quite a high pile of stone back of me, and there was a space (indicating) about so big, not filled in with them. I picked my way the best I could round the paving blocks and this required my attention, to see where I was going. . . . Before I came to the paving blocks while crossing, I looked to the north to see if any car was coming going south, and again I looked toward Lincoln Square to see if there was any car going south. I did not see any car or hear any car going south. I might have looked twice, but I did not see a car going south until it was a little ways from me and I tried to get out of the way, and I would say the car was about four feet from me, but before this I was picking
The declaration, which is in two counts, alleges in the first count, that the plaintiff was injured by being struck by a car operated by the defendant’s agents or servants “and thrown heavily to the ground,” and in the second count, that being required to keep its track in a reasonably safe condition for the use of travellers the defendant negligently suffered the track “to be obstructed with paving blocks and made dangerous by excavations without proper guards and protections to travellers.” The question therefore is, whether there was any evidence which would have warranted the jury in finding that the defendant failed to use ordinary care in the discharge of its duty to the plaintiff as a traveller. See also Dwyer v. Boston Elevated Railway, 220 Mass. 193; Torphy v. Fall River, 188 Mass. 310, 314; Hyde v. Boston Elevated Railway, 186 Mass. 115.
The second count is based on R. L. c. 112, § 44. A street railway company shall be liable for any loss or injury which may be sustained by any person in the management and use of its tracks and during the construction, alteration, extension, repair or renewal of its railway, or while replacing the surface of any street which may have been disturbed as aforesaid, and which results from the carelessness, neglect or misconduct of its agents or servants who are engaged in the prosecution of such work, if notice of such loss or injury is given to the company and an action therefor is commenced in the manner provided by section twenty of chapter fifty-one. . . .”
If it be assumed that under R. L. c. 51, § 20, the jury could have found on the record that the notice was not invalid because
If, however, the plaintiff cannot recover on this count, it is further contended, that under the first count there was evidence of the negligence of the defendant’s motorman. The accident happened at half past six in the morning of August 19, 1915, and the night watchman employed by the defendant to “put the lanterns out” and “to keep the traffic off the new paving until the grouting was dry” and whose duties ended when “the day gang” started in the morning at eight o’clock, the jury could say, was present in the performance of his duties. While the street technically had not been closed to public travel the repairs were proper, and all the conditions impeding the plaintiff’s passage were obvious, and she testified, “I noticed that the street was broken up,” and the barrier on the side indicated that at that place the street had been temporarily withdrawn from public travel by reason of the repairs which rendered it unfit for use, and the company in the exercise of reasonable diligence was under no obligation to take further precautions for her safety. MacFarlane v. Boston Elevated Railway, 194 Mass. 183. The car is not shown to have been running at an unusual or excessive
We are of opinion that in accordance with the report, judgment should be entered for the defendant on the verdict.
So ordered.