207 Mass. 548 | Mass. | 1911
The plaintiff in the first action (a woman sixty-seven years of age) had been to the theatre in company with her own daughter, a Mrs. Goodwin and Mrs. Goodwin’s daughter. After the theatre they waited for a car at the corner of Washington and Boylston Streets. The car stopped. The plaintiff entered first, followed by Mrs. Goodwin, then by Mrs. Goodwin’s daughter, and lastly by her own daughter. The plaintiff, her own daughter and Mrs. Goodwin testified at the trial; Mrs. Goodwin’s daughter did not. The plaintiff’s story was that she went to the forward end of the car because there was but one vacant seat at the rear. To quote her own words, “ She was in the act of sitting down when the car gave a sudden jerk and
We are of opinion that the evidence did not go far enough to warrant a finding that the motorman was negligent, and that the case comes within McGann v. Boston Elevated Railway, 199 Mass. 446. A jerk such as is usual might well throw a passenger “ just in the act of sitting down ” into the lap of a passenger next to her if the passenger was not prepared for it, and a person might well take hold of a door frame to steady himself in such a case. In Byron v. Lynn Boston Railroad, 177 Mass. 303, one of the witnesses testified that the motion of the car there in question “ knocked me over, my hand against the sash of the window. I came near falling over the lady I had given my seat to.” In spite of that it was held in that case that the evidence did not go far enough to warrant a. finding that the motorman was negligent.
Exceptions overruled.