266 Mass. 159 | Mass. | 1929
The plaintiff seeks to recover compensation for bodily injuries caused to her while a traveller on a public way by a defect therein. The case comes before us on report. The only question argued or presented is whether the judge was right in ruling that there was no sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the defect had existed long enough for the defendant in the exercise of reasonable care and diligence to have known of it.
Testimony on this point came from the plaintiff in substance that upon examination of the place of her injury she saw a large round hole, about six inches in diameter at the top and about three inches deep, worn smooth, without any
The defendant can be held liable for a defect in a public way only in instances where, by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, it might have had notice of such defect and remedied or guarded it. G. L. c. 84, § 15. Taylor v. Sterling, 250 Mass. 123, 127. The testimony in the case at bar that the edges of this hole were “worn smooth” was enough to support' the rational inference that the alleged defect had been in existence long enough to enable the defendant in the exercise of the care required of it to discover and remedy or guard the defect. The case at bar is distinguishable in its facts from Hamilton v. Cambridge, 219 Mass. 418, where there was nothing to show that the edges of the depression were worn smooth, and falls within the general rule illustrated by McMahon v. Harvard, 213 Mass. 20, Cannon v. Worcester, 225 Mass. 270, Hamlet v. Watertown, 248 Mass. 473, Murphy v. Somerville, 253 Mass. 544, and similar decisions.
In accordance with the terms of the report, verdict for the defendant is to be set aside and judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,200.
So ordered.