The question whether the car, upon which the plaintiff was conductor, was being run in violation of the Gen. Sts. c. 84, §§ 1, 2, at the time of the accident, or whether there was evidence in the case which would warrant the jury in finding that the car was not being run in violation of the statute, lies at the foundation of the case. For if the car was run lawfully, for the purpose of carrying passengers, the plaintiff was
We are of opinion that the whole evidence in the case shows that this car was being run for substantially the same purposes, and from the same motives, that street cars are usually run on secular days, for the purpose of accommodating the public generally, and earning money from any one who might see fit to travel upon it. And we are of opinion that a car so run is run in violation of law, though some of its passengers may be lawfully travelling.
It is not within our province to determine the wisdom or expediency of the law, or how far there has been a change in public sentiment in relation to the proper manner of observing the Lord’s day. These considerations are for the Legislature. We pan only take the law as it is written, and apply it according to its obvious meaning and the intention of the Legislature.
We do not intend to decide that a street car may not be so run on Sunday as to come within the exception of the statute, and be employed in a work of necessity or charity. We only decide that in this case there was no evidence which would warrant a jury in finding that this car was run from considerations of necessity or charity, and that the jury should have been so instructed. We cannot hold that the mere fact that some of the passengers on the car were lawfully travelling rendered the running of the car lawful. Commonwealth v. Sampson,
The plaintiff was engaged in performing his ordinary duties as conductor of a street car, and in performing those duties he was doing labor or work. Though he was travelling, he was primarily laboring, and his travelling was merely an incident of the kind of work in which he was engaged. The car being run in violation of law, he was both laboring and travelling on the Lord’s day in violation of law. The question then arises whether his violation of law contributed to cause his injury.
The general principles applicable to the case are well settled in this Commonwealth. The question has more frequently arisen in cases of travelling, doubtless for the reason that travelling is
It has been uniformly held in numerous decisions, from Bosworth v. Swansey,
In McGrath v. Merwin,
In all cases of travelling or laboring on the Lord’s day, in violation of law, all the acts of travelling or laboring being illegal, if any act of so travelling or laboring by a plaintiff contributes to his injury, it is held, under our decisions, that his illegal act must necessarily be a contributory cause of his injury, and prevent his recovery.
The plaintiff contends that, by the provisions of the St. of 1877, c. 232, his illegal travelling (the defendant being a common carrier of passengers) constitutes no defence to bis action. We have not found it necessary to determine whether the words “ a person so travelling,” in the St. of 1877, mean a person travelling in any way, or whether they are confined to a person travelling as a passenger with a common carrier of
We cannot doubt that the acts of the plaintiff in laboring necessarily contributed to his injury. The place he was occupying on the car, and the attitude he assumed at the time in collecting fares, especially exposed him to the injury he received, and contributed to it. The case of McGrath v. Merwin, ubi supra, is decisive of this case.
A majority of the court are of opinion that, under the undisputed facts in the case, the jury should have been instructed that the plaintiff’s illegal acts contributed to his injury, and that he was not entitled to recover. Smith v. Boston & Maine Railroad, ubi supra. Exceptions sustained.
