276 Mass. 381 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action of tort to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the defendant’s negligence when she was riding as a passenger in an electric street car, owned and operated by the defendant. A verdict for the defendant was directed upon its motion therefor and the plaintiff excepted. The parties agreed “that if the court was in error in directing a verdict, judgment should be entered for the plaintiff in the sum of $3,500; otherwise, judgment to be entered for the defendant.”
The plaintiff contends that the operator of the car started it negligently as she was in the act of leaving it. The evidence tended to show the following facts: The plaintiff was a passenger on a “one-man car” owned and operated by the defendant. There were six cross seats on each side
The verdict was directed rightly.
The evidence did not warrant a finding that the car was started negligently in respect either to time or to manner of starting. Under the decision of Gollis v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 254 Mass. 157, it is not negligence merely to start a car “when a passenger is in the act of leaving it, if at the time he is within the body of the car.” Page 158. See also Chandler v. Boston Elevated Railway, 261 Mass. 230. There was no material difference as to the time of starting the car between the facts of the Oollis case and those of the case at bar.
A “common carrier of passengers is not responsible for those sudden jolts or jerks which are the ordinary incidents of travel upon electric cars” (Chandler v. Boston Elevated Railway, 261 Mass. 230, at page 231; see also Work v. Boston Elevated Railway, 207 Mass. 447, 448; Walsh v. Boston Elevated Railway, 256 Mass. 17, 18), and the evidence in this case did not warrant a finding that the car was started with anything more than such an ordinary jolt or jerk.
There was no direct evidence of the way in which the operator started the car. The plaintiff’s testimony that she
The plaintiff’s statement that when the car started she felt “as if somebody pulled a carpet from under her feet, and . . . the car seemed to leap forward,” though vivid, was not such a plain description of fact, rather than “mere expletive or declamatory words or phrases,” as to warrant an inference that the car was started in an unusual way. Foley v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 193 Mass. 332, 335. Seidenberg v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 266 Mass. 540, 542, and cases cited. This evidence falls short of that in Nolan v. Newton Street Railway, 206 Mass. 384, 388-389. See Convery v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 252 Mass. 418, 420-421.
The evidence of physical facts resulting from the starting of the car did not indicate that it was started with an unusual jolt or jerk. As the plaintiff “was not holding on to anything” when she walked toward the front of the car, no firm hold was broken (see McRae v. Boston Elevated Railway, ante, 82, 83-84, and cases cited), and the fact, without more, that in these circumstances she was thrown off her balance and fell is not enough to show negligent operation. Griffin v. Springfield Street Railway, 219 Mass. 55, 56. The distance which she fell and the force of the impact of her knee against the seat of the car, as indicated by the nature of her injury, were not inconsistent with an unexpected but usual starting of the car when she was walking in the aisle without “holding on to anything.”
The plaintiff relies upon Convery v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 252 Mass. 418, Weiner v. Boston Elevated Railway, 262 Mass. 539, Pickard v. Boston Elevated Railway, 267 Mass. 133, and Hallinan v. Worcester Consolidated Street Railway, 273 Mass. 27. These cases are distinguishable on their facts from the case at bar. In the Weiner and Pickard cases it appeared that firm holds were broken. In the Con-very case there was evidence that the plaintiff was thrown a greater distance than the plaintiff in this case, not, as here, to the floor, but against the rear dashboard of the car, with such force that her shoulder and arm were injured, her leg was broken and her arm was “wedged in” back of the brake rod. In the Hallinan case there was evidence that three persons were thrown against seats or to the floor by starting of the car.
It follows that judgment must be entered for the defendant.
So ordered.