214 Mass. 98 | Mass. | 1913
The personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff in the first action, and the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, David H. Woodward, for which the second action is brought, are alleged to have been caused concurrently through the negligence of the defendant’s motorman. It being clear from the record, as conceded by the defendant, that if the plaintiff’s theory as to the manner in which the accident happened was adopted by the jury there was such evidence, the only question calling for discussion in the first case is whether the plaintiff used due care.
There is no occasion to recite at length the somewhat voluminous and contradictory testimony. The plaintiff Davis could have been found not to have exercised any control over the horse and buggy owned and driven by the intestate, even if he held the rope by which the other horse in the rear of the buggy was led. If this assistance was necessary the jury might be satisfied that the service was gratuitous, and that in no sense did he participate in the performance of the contract to deliver the horse to the purchaser, for which purpose the intestate had undertaken the
But the jury would have been warranted in finding further, that the intestate himself acted with ordinary prudence. By reason of the excavation required for the laying of water pipes by the city, and to avoid the open trench, it became necessary to pass over the defendant’s tracks laid in the roadway. At the time of entering upon the tracks no car was in sight, and where a car comes up from behind as in the present case, if the driver of the carriage turns off as soon as may be reasonably possible after he is aware of the car’s approach, the question of his due care generally is for the jury. White v. Worcester Consolidated, Street Railway, 167 Mass. 43. Vincent v. Norton & Taunton Street Railway, 180 Mass. 104. O’Brien v. Blue Hill Street Railway, 186 Mass. 446.
It appeared in the evidence for the plaintiffs, that while driving slowly because of the restricted space, the sounding of the whistle was the first and only warning received before the collision. It is maintained by the defendant, that when thus warned instead of urging his horse to a speed estimated at fifteen or eighteen miles an hour in an effort to escape, as the jury could find, or racing with the car as counsel urge, the intestate at once should have turned off from the track. But if the buggy had not reached the end of the trench, as the plaintiff’s evidence tended to show, where it safely could have done so, whether the conduct of the intestate in increasing speed to get out of the way evinced the care or the lack of it of the ordinarily prudent driver when beset with similar difficulties, was a question of fact. It certainly could not have been ruled as matter of law, that the occupants of the buggy either before or after the whistle sounded were bound to anticipate being run down from the rear. LeBlanc v. Lowell, Lawrence, & Haverhill Street Railway, 170 Mass. 564. Hatch v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 205 Mass. 410. Morrissey v. Boston Elevated Railway, 210 Mass. 424.
The evidence also would have warranted the jury in finding that the motorman was guilty of gross negligence under St. 1906,
A verdict for the defendant in the first case could not have been ordered and its exceptions must be overruled, and the plaintiff’s exceptions in the second case must be sustained and a new trial granted.
So ordered.